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    The Zone: A Dietary Road Map to Lose Weight Permanently : Reset Your Genetic Code : Prevent Disease : Achieve Maximum Physical Performance
    What to Eat in the Zone: The Quick & Easy, Mix & Match Counter for Staying in the Zone
    Mastering the Zone: The Next Step in Achieving SuperHealth and Permanent Fat Loss
    Zone Food Blocks: The Quick and Easy, Mix-and-Match Counter for Staying in the Zone
    A Week in the Zone: A Quick Course in the Healthiest Diet for You
    Zone, The
    Zone Perfect Meals in Minutes: 150 Fast and Simple Healthy Recipes from the Bestselling Authorof the Zone and Mastering the Zone
    The Top 100 Zone Foods: The Zone Food Science Ranking System
    The No-Beach, No-Zone, No-Nonsense Weight-Loss Plan: A Pocket Guide to What Works
    Shrink Your Female Fat Zones: Lose Pounds and Inches--Fast!--From Your Belly, Hips, Thighs, and More
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    The Hot Diet Scandal
    Zone Food Blocks: The Quick and Easy, Mix-and-Match Counter for Staying in the Zone
    Zone Food Blocks: The Quick and Easy, Mix-and-Match Counter for Staying in the Zone

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    Author: Barry, Ph.d. Sears
    Publisher: Collins Living
    Category: Book

    List Price: $19.00
    Buy Used: $0.01
    You Save: $18.99 (100%)



    New (51) Used (125) Collectible (3) from $0.01

    Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
    Sales Rank: 17455

    Media: Hardcover
    Edition: 1
    Number Of Items: 1
    Pages: 448
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
    Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 6.2 x 1.4

    ISBN: 0060392428
    Dewey Decimal Number: 613.2
    EAN: 9780060392420
    ASIN: 0060392428

    Publication Date: July 1, 1998
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Editorial Reviews:

    Amazon.com Review
    Here's the follow-up to The Zone and Mastering the Zone. Author Barry Sears, Ph.D., has formulated a way for readers to follow his diet plan (30 percent fat, 40 percent each carbohydrates and protein) by breaking down foods into measurable units, a la Weight Watchers. It's designed to make eating on the run--even if you're stopping at McDonald's--a Zone-friendly experience. But it's not exactly a piece of cake.

    Anyone who hated word problems in math class may be slightly baffled by the necessary calculations for foods not listed in the charts. For example, if you want to convert a serving of cereal into Zone blocks, you need to look at the label and subtract the grams of fiber from the total grams of carbohydrate; this gives the total of insulin-promoting carbohydrate. Divide this result by 10. (Although to be accurate, it should be divided by 9, as Sears has assigned 9 grams to each carbohydrate block; he says you may as well round up to 10, since that makes the math easier.) And there you get your Zone block. As long as your total blocks stay within the 40-30-30 ratio, you're in the Zone.

    Even more confusing are the measurements for some of the "pre-calculated" foods in the charts. For example, 80 fluid ounces of Rice Dream Rice milk equals 39 carbohydrate blocks and 8 fat blocks. While it's unlikely anyone would guzzle down 10 servings at once, it is likely they'd have a hard time finding this product in the listings in the first place, as it's listed under "milk, nondairy," not "rice milk." Many of the other listings are equally frustrating. To get one carbohydrate block of Schweppes ginger ale, you need to drink 3.3 fluid ounces. If you're working with a 12-ounce can, you can do some rounding, but if you have a liter-sized bottle at home, you're going to need a good eye to get that third of an ounce in a measuring cup. It's also hard to believe someone would eat eight-tenths of a slice of Pepperidge Farm bread to get one carbohydrate block, or six-tenths of a teaspoon of Bernstein's Caesar salad dressing to get one fat block. Dieting shouldn't be this difficult.

    Product Description

    Over two million people worldwide are already experiencing the health and performance benefits of the Zone diet. Based on the hormonal consequences of food rather than caloric content, the Zone treats food like a powerful drug. Properly administered, this drug allows you to maintain peak mental alertness throughout the day, increase your energy, and reduce the likelihood of chronic disease栬l while losing body fat.

    Now, in this essential new Zone reference guide, Barry Sears, provides you with the Zone resources and Food Block information you need to make every meal you eat a Zone meal, including:

    • How to use and adjust Zone Food to fit your own biochemistry

    • Zone Food Blocks for every ingredient, including vegetarian and nondairy sources of protein

    • Zone Food Blocks for fast food and prepackaged supermarket meals

    • Rules for modifying prepared foods to make them Zone–perfect

    • The Ten Zone Commandments for staying in the Zone

      Think better, perform better, look better, and live better榥t into the Zone.




    Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

    4 out of 5 stars Very thorough food guide   April 7, 2008
    I never thought I'd find such an extensive library on zone food blocks, including ready-made TV dinners and fast food. It does not include everything, but it makes a very good attempt at doing so.


    5 out of 5 stars I Could Not Do This Diet Successfully With Out This Book...   November 1, 2007
    This book is my "go to" for information for the zone diet. I can figure out how to eat anything and still stay in the zone. I would highly reccommend it.


    3 out of 5 stars ZONE FOOD BLOCKS   August 28, 2006
     4 out of 4 found this review helpful

    Good information.
    Many fresh fruits and vegetables are not listed. Mostly canned, frozen, and processed foods are listed.
    The organization within the main categories is difficult to navigate. Rather than listing "fruits" within the Carbohydrate category and putting all fruits under that heading, they are listed alphabetically within the category and mixed in with everyting else.



    2 out of 5 stars It's not as complicated as Sears wants you to believe   August 14, 2006
     5 out of 7 found this review helpful

    Sears wants you to think he has come up with a complicated system which he calls The Zone.

    In reality, all you need is to eat naturally, like our ancestors did thousands of years ago. Eat greens, vegetables, berries, fruit, mushrooms, nuts. Eat lean meat (our ancestors hunted for healthy, lean animals). Eat egg whites, but avoid yolks. Most of the modern contaminants stick to fat molecules, and yolks are mostly fat. Plus it's the wrong type of fat, as chickens are not fed properly. Eat wild fish (but not too often; don't forget about pollutants).

    That's it. Forget grains (and everything made from them). Forget potatoes and hard beans, soda and juices. Forget vegetable oils. All that junk is completely unnatural for humans to eat; our ancestors couldn't imagine that was edible. And that's why we have diseases that they didn't have.

    Forget milk. Milk is only good for babies under 3 years old. Studies show that milk (and even yogurt) causes hyperinsulinemia (insulin "spikes" that lead to diabetes etc.) in adults.

    Yes, his advice to take fish oil is great. Farm-raised animals are fed with junk food; consequently, they lack certain fatty acids that are vital for our health. Fish oil is a convenient way of restoring the balance. But Sears' fish oil is not the purest and cheapest on the market.

    I'm a physiologist, and I've helped a number of people to change their eating habits. Those people have gotten rid of many problems, like obesity, allergies, asthma, arthritis, and excessive fatigue. And they don't complain that the food is not delicious enough. They learned to use their imagination a little bit and combine various healthy foods to create their nice and simple "recipes", and realized they enjoy their food even more than before.



    3 out of 5 stars A little complicated - but a handy reference   February 8, 2006
    This is a very nice book to have as a reference if you're on the Zone diet. It has a very comprehensive and detailed list of frozen dinners, broken down into blocks.

    The reason I'm giving it three stars, though, is the fact that the book is not very user-friendly. It's VERY bulky, so I have to type grocery lists on the computer of what I can from the book when I go shopping. I also wish the fast foods section was more of a "This is what you can, and can't eat" reference. It tells you how many blocks each food is, but when you're at Wendy's, chances are, you won't have the book handy.

    A helpful tip to remember is: If you're going to buy this book, highlight what you think you can eat and then write it down and keep in in your wallet or purse for the store or when you're out to eat. Also write down how many blocks each meal is so that you'll know if you need to compensate for a fat or carb during the meal. Then you have a great reference at home with everything you need, and a travel-sized version!



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