Reddit mentions: The best restaurant & food industry books

We found 2 Reddit comments discussing the best restaurant & food industry books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 1 product and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.

1. The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite

    Features:
  • Dimensions: 11 in. h x 8.5 in. w x 0.1 in. d
The End of Overeating: Taking Control of the Insatiable American Appetite
Specs:
Height8.44 Inches
Length5.51 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateSeptember 2010
Width0.99 Inches
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🎓 Reddit experts on restaurant & food industry books

The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where restaurant & food industry books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Total score: 4
Number of comments: 1
Relevant subreddits: 1

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Top Reddit comments about Restaurant & Food Industry:

u/user_1729 · 4 pointsr/fatlogic

I read this book a while ago: http://www.amazon.com/The-End-Overeating-Insatiable-American/dp/B004NSVE32

"The End of Overeating" It basically talks about how restaurants and food manufacturers are making foods that completely mess with our brains. They spend a lot of money on the perfect balance of fat, sugar, and salt to create basically a completely insatiable desire to eat and eat and eat. The shit is like crack!

I honestly can't tell if the book is Fatlogic or not, it takes a lot of responsibility out of the hands of the "eaters", but still says flat out that people are overeating. The idea of intuitive eating working in a world where the ones selling food are deliberately trying to get you to overeat seems pretty ridiculous.

u/[deleted] · 13 pointsr/fatlogic

Oh, my God. This is gold. I love the hypocrisy: raging against the pharmaceutical and weight loss industries (which is arguably a legitimate beef) while ignoring the fact that the food industry spends millions on lobbying and marketing to keep people in the dark about nutrition.

BBW BTW, if anyone wants a couple of fascinating reads on how the food industry operates, here are two of my favorites. Both are cheap on Amazon and will do terrible things to your jimmies.