Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us
Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us book cover

Salt Sugar Fat: How the Food Giants Hooked Us

Paperback – Illustrated, February 18, 2014

Price
$9.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
480
Publisher
Random House Trade Paperbacks
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0812982190
Dimensions
5.53 x 1.1 x 8.24 inches
Weight
12.8 ounces

Description

Review “As a feat of reporting and a public service, Salt Sugar Fat is a remarkable accomplishment.” — The New York Times Book Review “[Michael] Moss has written a Fast Food Nation for the processed food industry. Burrowing deep inside the big food manufacturers, he discovered how junk food is formulated to make us eat more of it and, he argues persuasively, actually to addict us.” —Michael Pollan “If you had any doubt as to the food industry’s complicity in our obesity epidemic, it will evaporate when you read this book.” — The Washington Post “Vital reading for the discerning food consumer.” — The Wall Street Journal “Propulsively written [and] persuasively argued . . . an exactingly researched, deeply reported work of advocacy journalism.” — The Boston Globe “[An] eye-popping exposé . . . Moss’s vivid reportage remains alive to the pleasures of junk—‘the heated fat swims over the tongue to send signals of joy to the brain’—while shrewdly analyzing the manipulative profiteering behind them. The result is a mouth-watering, gut-wrenching look at the food we hate to love.” — Publishers Weekly “Revelatory . . . a shocking, galvanizing manifesto against the corporations manipulating nutrition to fatten their bottom line—one of the most important books of the year.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “What happens when one of the country’s great investigative reporters infiltrates the most disastrous cartel of modern times: a processed food industry that’s making a fortune by slowly poisoning an unwitting population? You get this terrific, powerfully written book, jammed with startling disclosures, jaw-dropping confessions and, importantly, the charting of a path to a better, healthier future. This book should be read by anyone who tears a shiny wrapper and opens wide. That’s all of us.” —Ron Suskind, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Confidence Men: Wall Street, Washington, and the Education of a President “In this meticulously researched book, Michael Moss tells the chilling story of how the food giants have seduced everyone in this country. He understands a vital and terrifying truth: that we are not just eating fast food when we succumb to the siren song of sugar, fat, and salt. We are fundamentally changing our lives—and the world around us.” —Alice Waters “ Salt Sugar Fat is a breathtaking feat of reporting. Michael Moss was able to get executives of the world’s largest food companies to admit that they have only one job—to maximize sales and profits—and to reveal how they deliberately entice customers by stuffing their products with salt, sugar, and fat. This is a truly important book, and anyone reading it will understand why food corporations cannot be trusted to value health over profits and why we all need to recognize and resist food marketing every time we grocery shop or vote.” —Marion Nestle, author of Food Politics and What to Eat About the Author Michael Moss was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting in 2010, and was a finalist for the prize in 1999 and 2006. He is also the recipient of a Loeb Award and an Overseas Press Club citation. Before coming to The New York Times, he was a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, Newsday, and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution . He lives in Brooklyn with his wife and two sons. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. part one sugarchapter one“Exploiting the Biology of the Child”The first thing to know about sugar is this: Our bodies are hard-wired for sweets.Forget what we learned in school from that old diagram called the tongue map, the one that says our five main tastes are detected by five distinct parts of the tongue. That the back has a big zone for blasts of bitter, the sides grab the sour and the salty, and the tip of the tongue has that one single spot for sweet. The tongue map is wrong. As researchers would discover in the 1970s, its creators misinterpreted the work of a German graduate student that was published in 1901; his experiments showed only that we might taste a little more sweetness on the tip of the tongue. In truth, the entire mouth goes crazy for sugar, including the upper reaches known as the palate. There are special receptors for sweetness in every one of the mouth’s ten thousand taste buds, and they are all hooked up, one way or another, to the parts of the brain known as the pleasure zones, where we get rewarded for stoking our bodies with energy. But our zeal doesn’t stop there. Scientists are now finding taste receptors that light up for sugar all the way down our esophagus to our stomach and pancreas, and they appear to be intricately tied to our appetites.The second thing to know about sugar: Food manufacturers are well aware of the tongue map folly, along with a whole lot more about why we crave sweets. They have on staff cadres of scientists who specialize in the senses, and the companies use their knowledge to put sugar to work for them in countless ways. Sugar not only makes the taste of food and drink irresistible. The industry has learned that it can also be used to pull off a string of manufacturing miracles, from donuts that fry up bigger to bread that won’t go stale to cereal that is toasty-brown and fluffy. All of this has made sugar a go-to ingredient in processed foods. On average, we consume 71 pounds of caloric sweeteners each year. That’s 22 teaspoons of sugar, per person, per day. The amount is almost equally split three ways, with the sugar derived from sugar cane, sugar beets, and the group of corn sweeteners that includes high-fructose corn syrup (with a little honey and syrup thrown into the mix).That we love, and crave, sugar is hardly news. Whole books have been devoted to its romp through history, in which people overcame geography, strife, and overwhelming technical hurdles to feed their insatiable habit. The highlights start with Christopher Columbus, who brought sugar cane along on his second voyage to the New World, where it was planted in Spanish Santo Domingo, was eventually worked into granulated sugar by enslaved Africans, and, starting in 1516, was shipped back to Europe to meet the continent’s surging appetite for the stuff. The next notable development came in 1807 when a British naval blockade of France cut off easy access to sugar cane crops, and entrepreneurs, racing to meet demand, figured out how to extract sugar from beets, which could be grown easily in temperate Europe. Cane and beets remained the two main sources of sugar until the 1970s, when rising prices spurred the invention of high-fructose corn syrup, which had two attributes that were attractive to the soda industry. One, it was cheap, effectively subsidized by the federal price supports for corn; and two, it was liquid, which meant that it could be pumped directly into food and drink. Over the next thirty years, our consumption of sugar-sweetened soda more than doubled to 40 gallons a year per person, and while this has tapered off since then, hitting 32 gallons in 2011, there has been a commensurate surge in other sweet drinks, like teas, sports ades, vitamin waters, and energy drinks. Their yearly consumption has nearly doubled in the past decade to 14 gallons a person.Far less well known than the history of sugar, however, is the intense research that scientists have conducted into its allure, the biology and psychology of why we find it so irresistible.For the longest time, the people who spent their careers studying nutrition could only guess at the extent to which people are attracted to sugar. They had a sense, but no proof, that sugar was so powerful it could compel us to eat more than we should and thus do harm to our health. That all changed in the late 1960s, when some lab rats in upstate New York got ahold of Froot Loops, the supersweet cereal made by Kellogg. The rats were fed the cereal by a graduate student named Anthony Sclafani who, at first, was just being nice to the animals in his care. But when Sclafani noticed how fast they gobbled it up, he decided to concoct a test to measure their zeal. Rats hate open spaces; even in cages, they tend to stick to the shadowy corners and sides. So Sclafani put a little of the cereal in the brightly lit, open center of their cages—normally an area to be avoided—to see what would happen. Sure enough, the rats overcame their instinctual fears and ran out in the open to gorge.Their predilection for sweets became scientifically significant a few years later when Sclafani—who’d become an assistant professor of psychology at Brooklyn College—was trying to fatten some rats for a study. Their standard Purina Dog Chow wasn’t doing the trick, even when Sclafani added lots of fats to the mix. The rats wouldn’t eat enough to gain significant weight. So Sclafani, remembering the Froot Loops experiment, sent a graduate student out to a supermarket on Flatbush Avenue to buy some cookies and candies and other sugar-laden products. And the rats went bananas, they couldn’t resist. They were particularly fond of sweetened condensed milk and chocolate bars. They ate so much over the course of a few weeks that they grew obese.“Everyone who owns pet rats knows if you give them a cookie they will like that, but no one experimentally had given them all they want,” Sclafani told me when I met him at his lab in Brooklyn, where he continues to use rodents in studying the psychology and brain mechanisms that underlie the desire for high-fat and high-sugar foods. When he did just that, when he gave his rats all they wanted, he saw their appetite for sugar in a new light. They loved it, and this craving completely overrode the biological brakes that should have been saying: Stop.The details of Sclafani’s experiment went into a 1976 paper that is revered by researchers as one of the first experimental proofs of food cravings. Since its publication, a whole body of research has been undertaken to link sugar to compulsive overeating. In Florida, researchers have conditioned rats to expect an electrical shock when they eat cheesecake, and still they lunge for it. Scientists at Princeton found that rats taken off a sugary diet will exhibit signs of withdrawal, such as chattering teeth. Still, these studies involve only rodents, which in the world of science are known to have a limited ability to predict human physiology and behavior.What about people and Froot Loops?For some answers to this question, and for most of the foundational science on how and why we are so attracted to sugar, the food industry has turned to a place called the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia. It is located a few blocks west of the Amtrak station, in a bland five-story brick building easily overlooked in the architectural wasteland of the district known as University City—except for “Eddy,” the giant sculpture that stands guarding the entrance. Eddy is a ten-foot-high fragment of a face, and he perfectly captures the obsessions of those inside: He is all nose and mouth.Getting buzzed through the center’s front door is like stepping into a clubhouse for PhDs. The scientists here hang out in the corridors to swap notions that lead to wild discoveries, like how cats are unable to taste sweets, or how the cough that results from sipping a high-quality olive oil is caused by an anti-inflammatory agent, which may prove to be yet another reason for nutritionists to love this oil so much. The researchers at Monell bustle to and from conference rooms and equipment-filled labs and peer through one-way mirrors at the children and adults who eat and drink their way through the center’s many ongoing experiments. Over the last forty years, more than three hundred physiologists, chemists, neuroscientists, biologists, and geneticists have cycled through Monell to help decipher the mechanisms of taste and smell along with the complex psychology that underlies our love for food. They are among the world’s foremost authorities on taste. In 2001, they identified the actual protein molecule, T1R3, that sits in the taste bud and detects sugar. More recently they have been tracking the sugar sensors that are spread throughout the digestive system, and they now suspect that these sensors are playing a variety of key roles in our metabolism. They have even solved one of the more enduring mysteries in food cravings: the marijuana-induced state known as “the munchies.” This came about in 2009 when Robert Margolskee, a molecular biologist and associate director of the center, joined other scientists in discovering that the sweet taste receptors on the tongue get aroused by endocannabinoids—substances that are produced in the brain to increase our appetite. They are chemical sisters to THC, the active ingredient in marijuana, which may explain why smoking marijuana can trigger hunger pangs. “Our taste cells are turning out to be smarter than we thought, and more involved in regulating our appetites,” Margolskee told me.The stickiest subject at Monell, however, is not sugar. It’s money. Taxpayers fund about half of the center’s $17.5 million annual budget through federal grants, but much of the rest of its operation comes from the food industry, including the big manufacturers, as well as several tobacco companies. A large golden plaque in the lobby pays homage to PepsiCo, Coca-Cola, Kraft, Nestlé, Philip Morris, among others. It’s an odd arrangement, for sure, one that evokes past efforts by the tobacco industry to buy “research” that put cigarettes in a favorable light. At Monell, the industry funding buys companies a privileged access to the center and its labs. They get exclusive first looks at the center’s research, often as early as three years before the information goes public, and are also able to engage some of Monell’s scientists to conduct special studies for their particular needs. But Monell prides itself on the integrity and independence of its scientists. Some of their work, in fact, is funded with monies from the lawsuits that states brought against the tobacco manufacturers.“At Monell, scientists choose their research projects based solely on their own curiosity and interests and are deeply committed to the pursuit of fundamental knowledge,” the center said in response to my questions about its financial structure. Indeed, as I would discover, though Monell receives industry funding, some of its scientists sound like consumer activists when they speak about the power their benefactors wield, especially when it comes to children.This tension between the industry’s excitement about the research at Monell and the center’s own unease about the industry’s practices dates back to some of the center’s earliest research on our taste buds—based on age, sex, and race. Back in the 1970s, researchers at Monell discovered that kids and African Americans were particularly keen on foods that were salty and sweet. They gave solutions of varying sweetness and saltiness to a group of 140 adults and then to a group of 618 children aged nine to fifteen, and the kids were found to like the highest level of sweet and salty—even more than the adults. Twice as many kids as adults chose the sweetest and saltiest solutions. (This was the first scientific proof of what parents, watching their kids lunge for the sugar bowl at the breakfast table, already knew instinctively.) The difference among adults was less striking but still significant: More African Americans chose the sweetest and saltiest solutions.One of Monell’s sponsors, Frito-Lay, was particularly interested in the salt part of the study, since the company made most of its money on salty chips. Citing Monell’s work in a 1980 internal memo, a Frito-Lay food scientist summed up the finding on kids and added, “Racial Effect: It has been shown that blacks (in particular, black adolescents) displayed the greatest preference for a high concentration of salt.” The Monell scientist who did this groundbreaking study, however, raised another issue that reflected his anxiety about the food industry. Kids didn’t just like sugar more than adults, this scientist, Lawrence Greene, pointed out in a paper published in 1975. Data showed they were actually consuming more of the stuff, and Greene suggested there might be a chicken-and-egg issue at play: Some of this craving for sugar may not be innate in kids but rather is the result of the massive amounts of sugar being added to processed foods. Scientists call this a learned behavior, and Greene was one of the first to suggest that the increasingly sweet American diet could be driving the desire for more sugar, which, he wrote, “may or may not correspond to optimum nutritional practices.”In other words, the sweeter the industry made its food, the sweeter kids liked their food to be.I wanted to explore this idea a bit more deeply, so I spent some time with Julie Mennella, a biopsychologist who first came to Monell in 1988. In graduate school, she had studied maternal behavior in animals and realized that no one was examining the influence that food and flavors had on women who were mothers. She joined Monell to answer a set of unknowns about food. Do the flavors of the food you eat transmit to your milk? Do they transmit to amniotic fluid? Do babies develop likes and dislikes for foods even before they are born?“One of the most fundamental mysteries is why we like the foods that we do,” Mennella said. “The liking of sweet is part of the basic biology of a child. When you think of the taste system, it makes one of the most important decisions of all: whether to accept a food. And, once we do, to warn the digestive system of impending nutrients. The taste system is our gatekeeper and one of the research approaches has been to take a developmental route, to look from the beginning—and what you see is that children are living in different sensory worlds than you and I. As a group, they prefer much higher levels of sweet and salt, rejecting bitter more than we do. I would argue that part of the reason children like high levels of sweet and salt is a reflection of their basic biology.” Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
  • The Atlantic • The Huffington Post • Men’s Journal • MSN
  • (U.K.) •
  • Kirkus Reviews • Publishers Weekly
  • #1
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER •
  • WINNER OF THE JAMES BEARD FOUNDATION AWARD FOR WRITING AND LITERATURE
  • Every year, the average American eats thirty-three pounds of cheese and seventy pounds of sugar. Every day, we ingest 8,500 milligrams of salt, double the recommended amount, almost none of which comes from the shakers on our table. It comes from processed food, an industry that hauls in $1 trillion in annual sales. In
  • Salt Sugar Fat,
  • Pulitzer Prize–winning investigative reporter Michael Moss shows how we ended up here. Featuring examples from Kraft, Coca-Cola, Lunchables, Frito-Lay, Nestlé, Oreos, Capri Sun, and many more, Moss’s explosive, empowering narrative is grounded in meticulous, eye-opening research. He takes us into labs where scientists calculate the “bliss point” of sugary beverages, unearths marketing techniques taken straight from tobacco company playbooks, and talks to concerned insiders who make startling confessions. Just as millions of “heavy users” are addicted to salt, sugar, and fat, so too are the companies that peddle them. You will never look at a nutrition label the same way again.
  • Praise for
  • Salt Sugar Fat
  • “[Michael] Moss has written a
  • Fast Food Nation
  • for the processed food industry. Burrowing deep inside the big food manufacturers, he discovered how junk food is formulated to make us eat more of it and, he argues persuasively, actually to addict us.”
  • —Michael Pollan
  • “If you had any doubt as to the food industry’s complicity in our obesity epidemic, it will evaporate when you read this book.”
  • The Washington Post
  • “Vital reading for the discerning food consumer.”
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • “The chilling story of how the food giants have seduced everyone in this country . . . Michael Moss understands a vital and terrifying truth: that we are not just eating fast food when we succumb to the siren song of sugar, fat, and salt. We are fundamentally changing our lives—and the world around us.”
  • —Alice Waters
  • “Propulsively written [and] persuasively argued . . . an exactingly researched, deeply reported work of advocacy journalism.”
  • The Boston Globe
  • “A remarkable accomplishment.”
  • The New York Times Book Review

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(1.9K)
★★★★
25%
(800)
★★★
15%
(480)
★★
7%
(224)
-7%
(-224)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

We were duped. I highly recommend this book.

This book is jam packed with real life conspiracies and facts about the biggest market manipulators in history. I have really enjoyed reading this book as the author is eloquent and keeps heaps of information light and quick to read. It doesn't bog you down while reading and it was a real page turner for me.

I have become concerned with my health over the past 5 years, since I got married, and my overall diet went from lentils and brown rice day in, day out, to cardboard boxes, plastic packaging, fast food, restaurants, take out, microwaves, lunch meats, cheese galore, cookies, candy bars, etc. etc. After being in and out of over 7 different specialists' offices and surgical suites in the years since this S.A.D. under-haul with various severe ailments from gastrointestinal to gynecological, I have began taking back control of my health. This book has been somewhat of a nail in the coffin in those regards.

Basically, I learned to stop feeding myself lies. After reading this book, I can see blatant lies and misleading claims all throughout the grocery store. Meaning advertising on signs and boxes - all bright and colorful to lure you and your children with willynilly health claims based on a minute shred of evidence from a biased Nabisco or General Mills 'investigation.' etc. "Contains real fruit juice" means nothing. "100% natural" is meaningless and any person can put that on ANY product whether it's true or not. Stop giving your kids Capri Sun and sweetened 'fruit juices.' You owe it to them to educate yourself so they have a shot at a long and healthy life without being shot in the foot by their parents during their formative years. Really. Take some responsibility. Don't even get me started on Lunchables! One of the downfalls of our modern day society. "It's like I'm sending my kid to school with a present so he knows I love him! Tee Hee!" Yeah, well enjoy your child having plaque in his arteries by age ten. I digress.

Keep this in mind the next time you go shopping: Lead paint tastes sweet, but that doesn't mean you should eat it!!

I bet a lot of people would be surprised to know that Betty Crocker is a figment of an ad execs imagination. Not real, not in the least. Don't fall for her lies about Crisco and making life easier by NOT cooking dinner and having more TV time in the evenings. This is how we went off the rails, and the U.S. government was a huge promoter of that. Nearly everyone knows the U.S. is in cahoots with the sugar industry, the beef industry, the dairy industry, and so on and so forth. Essentially, anything that is bad or unnecessary for us is shoved in our faces by the DOA (Eat more beef and cheese!), by the huge conglomerates themselves, and, as another surprising example, by Philip Morris; a tobacco company who actually owns several of the biggest "food" production companies around.

Quick - what's the overall biggest contributor of saturated fat in the American diet? Cheese! And then Beef! Whoo hoo! Oh, er...wait....heart disease is our nation's #1 killer.... and the government wants us to eat more.. cheese? Oy.

Anyway - Great book. I highly recommend to anyone without a clue. It might clear some things up. I apologize for being snarky. It's just that.. you know. Insurance rates. Crowded hospitals. Less room in your airplane seat when sitting next to someone due to size. Others' actions impact everyone else and no one considers their fellow-person anymore. Sigh.
192 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

but it tastes so good...

Let me be clear, I am not a healthy eater. I, like most Americans, have failed countless times against the power of processed foods. I know a salad would be best. I know soda is sugary poison. I know vegetables, whole grains, and less red meat are foundational to a healthy life. But again and again, I succumb to the addictive bliss delivered by Doritos, Coca-Cola, and Oreos (maybe not at the same time…maybe).

Food companies have figured it out. We love the taste of salt, sugar, and fat. The key though is to create a balance, you cannot simply just add more. Food companies employ thousands of scientists to create foods and improve the classics while shoring up the bottom line.

When I read about food companies battling for new customers by creating tastier food, I don’t initially object. It makes sense. The top mission of a company is to make money; this is capitalism in a nutshell. Why should I object to this? If a company makes an unhealthy or even downright dangerous product, won’t the consumer notice and change? It doesn’t make good business to kill your customers because that means fewer customers. Furthermore, if I decide to eat two dozen processed cookies along with a gallon of cola, that’s my choice and my problem. The food company didn’t force that on me.

But when I look at the big picture, I can definitely see the problems. My health has an impact on my family and society. Eating poorly for one day has little effect, but eating poorly for a lifetime has a devastating impact. This is a great example of how government regulation can help society. We cannot wait for the food companies to voluntarily make their food safer and healthier, because another company will swoop in a take their consumers. But if the government steps in and creates mandatory safety levels for dangerous items such as salt, sugar, and fat, it can help change society for the better.

Of course, it doesn’t solve all the problems. The government can demand my potato chips be less salty and in turn, I eat two bags instead of one. There is still a choice by me. Similarly, I can drive my car with my seat belt on and properly installed airbags and still hurt myself and others driving 100+ mph off a cliff.

This is an interesting book that challenged me on how to view my food intake and the big business of processed foods. Unfortunately, those Oreos still call me name…
46 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

This book just made to my top 10 list on best of all time!

To simply state that this book was the most eye opening experience ever delivered to me since I learned how to read would be a gross understatement! This book is not only a disturbing history lesson on how the perfect social storm led to the cunning manipulation of the consumers’ habits and preferences, but also a deeper scientific understanding of how they can be steered and driven in our feeding processes. The intelligence preparation of the grocery aisle battlespace alone makes for voracious reading (pun intended), while the scientific backgrounds to taste and visual attraction to packaging are also immensely helpful to forever educate when we next visit the supermarket.
16 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Outdated Science Impairs the message of Salt, Sugar, Fat

Outdated science impairs the message of Salt, Sugar, Fat. This book has a copyright date of 2013, yet the author hasn't read the book that explained our obesity epidemic, the 2008 Good Calories, Bad Calories, by Gary Taubes, and the author isn't familiar with the research about saturated fat recently collected in The Big Fat Surprise, by Teicholz. Moss repeated states that "the deliver[y of] calories, after all, is the ultimate cause of obesity." (page 329). It isn't, as Taubes exhaustively and rigorously explains. Moss repeated states that saturated fats are a cause of heart disease, but we've known that the studies that claimed the evils of saturated fat are bunk for a long time, and most recently, the Nutrition Counsel has changed their tune to the extent that they have admitted there is no causal relationship between the consumption of dietary fat (saturated fat) and heart disease, all of which is nicely laid out in the Big Fat Surprise, and which should have been known (or at least commented upon), by Moss. Further, Moss appears to be shocked -- shocked -- that billion dollar companies have well paid and brilliant people trying to keep these companies in the billion dollar league. If that surprises, or "shocks" you, I have a bridge in New York to sell you.
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not Morton's crappy table salt

So the problem here is he doesn't "get it." Yes, sugar is poison and the devil. Who DOESN'T know that? What he doesn't get it healthy fat is necessary. If we eliminate most carbs (yes, we can and should survive on almost no carbs despite the government telling us otherwise), and we eat healthy meats, fats and veggies, etc...we actually NEED salt. Not Morton's crappy table salt. No, we need good salt, himilayan pink salt which is loaded with minerals vital to our well-being. He simply doesn't get healthy nutrition.
9 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Boring

Dry and tedious
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Exceptional! A treasure trove of pertinent information

First of all, about the health effects of consuming (salt, sugar, and fat) in excess of the RDA guidelines, it lightly skims the surface. If your interested in more details pertaining to the medical consequences (diabetes, elevated blood pressure, and heart disease) of over indulgence, I would suggest "Fat Chance" by Dr. Lustig. An example would best illustrate the format this book takes. The author discusses at length the fierce rivalry between Coke and Pepsi. Michael Moss writes "Coke became the most powerful brand in the world - a brand that was deeply rooted in people's psyches, able to generate staggering heights of consumer loyalty." He goes on to describe the marketing techniques that Coke used over the decades to achieve this 'goodwill' towards the brand. The book is filled with intriguing histories of such companies as Campbell Soup, Kraft, Dr. Pepper Snapple Group, General Foods, General Mills, Kellogg, Nabisco, Nestle, Oscar Mayer, and many others. The author is a Pulitzer Prize recipient. Excellent work, six stars out of five. Another book "Fast Food Nation" by author Eric Schlosser has done in-depth research on this topic.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Outdated

I read through the “Sugar” portion of the book, about six chapters worth. I had to stop. I couldn’t stand it any more.

The author takes forever to get to the point, and this book could easily be a blog post or article.

My biggest qualm is that the author cites data and stories from the 1960s-1990s almost exclusively... despite the book being published in 2013. There more recent and accurate data in the 2000s than dipping 30-40 years into the past.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Brilliantly Researched - Thought Provoking

As the title and jacket of the book states, this is a book about processed food. It is a subject I've read quite a bit on, but nothing prepared me for the depth of this great work. While it does center around food, it was the detail in history, science, and social aspects that had me tearing through the pages. The level of research is fantastic. This book will have you starting your own research, speaking to friends and family about history, but most importantly it will have you seeing the grocery store in a whole new light. Highly Recommend!
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

certain ethnicity/race) continue to get sucked in to tactics used by the corporations SPECIFICALLY at ...

Absolutely fascinating read! Michael Moss is so experienced and knowledgeable on this topic it was a fast page turner of a book. Knowledge IS power where the food industry secrets covered in this book is a must read for all Americans particularly when this country is drowning in sugar, salt, and fat. We vote with our dollar everyday towards food policy, our health and the future of our nation. If we don't know the Goliath that we are up against where these food corporation giants are spending billions in research and marketing we will never win. (such as food industry receiving tax deductions on marketing efforts!! While the most vulnerable population ( i.e. Low income, certain ethnicity/race) continue to get sucked in to tactics used by the corporations SPECIFICALLY at times targeted towards them and becoming more and more disadvantaged, addicted to these foods, and unhealthy. Thank you Michael Moss for your dedication and hard work in uncovering the truth and having the courage to speak up and share/uncover the biggest lie of the century to essentially save our nations lives/health!!! Highly recommended read and a must have.
5 people found this helpful