home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT2246>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: The Foie Gras Diet
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FOOD, Page 56
- The Foie Gras Diet
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Some too-good-to-be-true news for the holidays: a French gastronome
- says you can eat fat, yet stay slim
- </p>
- <p>By Margot Hornblower/Paris
- </p>
- <p> Michel Montignac ogles a slice of foie gras marinated in Cognac.
- He beams over a chocolate mousse swimming in lavender-flavored
- sauce and, closing his eyes, dreamily sniffs a glass of Bordeaux.
- Delicious, yes, but surely these rich offerings are as fattening
- as French food can be?
- </p>
- <p> Mais non, says Montignac, who doesn't believe in worrying about
- calories. "Conventional low-calorie diets are among the great
- scientific swindles of the 20th century," he maintains. "We
- should sweep away scruples and allow our epicurean instincts
- full rein." Susan Powter would surely throw down her barbells,
- but such appealing heresy has made Montignac Europe's newest
- diet guru. His book Je Mange, Donc Je Maigris!--I Eat, Therefore
- I Slim--dominated France's best-seller lists for an unprecedented
- 106 weeks, selling 1.1 million copies and leading to translations
- in five other European countries and Japan. A U.S. edition is
- planned for next year.
- </p>
- <p> In the diet-crazy U.S., Montignac, 49, might be shrugged off
- as yet another media-hyped Dr. Feelgood. But in France, the
- former pharmaceutical-company executive has made a mint telling
- Gallic gourmands what they want to hear. His empire, dubbed
- "La Galaxie Montignac," is an $11 million-a-year business with
- a chain of food boutiques, a vineyard producing Chateau Michel
- Montignac Bordeaux, a mail-order firm selling Montignac foie
- gras and Montignac chocolate, a quarterly magazine, an Institute
- of Vitality and Nutrition through which 350 physicians prescribe
- his method, and a company offering one-day diet seminars for
- corporate executives at $420 a head. Last October, Montignac
- opened a 240-seat restaurant near the Paris stock exchange.
- This month he will act as host of a Caribbean cruise with chef
- Roger Verge for 150 "gastronomic dieters." The price: $4,000
- a head.
- </p>
- <p> Montignac's method, based on "a synthesis of my scientific readings,"
- strictly limits starches, sweets and alcohol during an initial
- weight-loss period of several months. Then, in the maintenance
- phase of the diet, he allows such goodies as red wine, sausage
- canapes, foie gras, cheese and the occasional chocolate dessert.
- Whole grains are in. Soft drinks are "poison." Alcoholic aperitifs
- are discouraged, and wine is to be drunk only with meals.
- </p>
- <p> Rather than count calories, Montignac measures foods by their
- "glycemic index," or the blood-sugar level they induce. Sugar,
- he contends, stimulates the overproduction of insulin, which
- leads the body to store fat. Thus foods with a high index, such
- as potatoes and white bread, should not be combined with fats
- like butter.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the medical establishment is skeptical. "Montignac's
- diet works short term because anyone loses weight when deprived
- of sugar and starch," says nutritionist Dr. Jacques Fricker.
- "But it could be dangerous, since up to 70% of his calories
- come from fat, which increases the risk of heart disease." Says
- Felicia Busch of the American Dietetic Association in Chicago:
- "The most important thing we know is that fat content is what
- makes people fat, and his theory goes against the scientific
- grain." Others complain that he encourages too much alcohol
- consumption, which could cause liver damage. Montignac denies
- his diet is high in cholesterol and recommends cooking in olive
- oil and other unsaturated fats. Still, Dr. Stephen Heymsfield
- of the Obesity Research Center at St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital
- in New York City gives Montignac the benefit of the doubt: "His
- physiobiology--the glycemic index--is oversimplistic, but
- nonscientists always oversimplify. However, it seems his recommendations
- are not necessarily outside accepted science and not dangerous."
- </p>
- <p> Montignac knows about weight problems firsthand. After losing
- his job with an American drug company in 1986, he was at loose
- ends. Having trimmed down from a high of 200 lbs. to 165 lbs.
- while reading some 300 diet books, the 5 ft. 8 in. Montignac
- decided to write his own. Targeting his fellow expense-account-habitues,
- he titled his book Dine Out and Lose Weight and published it
- himself. Its word-of-mouth success--500,000 copies sold, without
- advertising--led to three sequels, and Montignac was launched.
- </p>
- <p> His popularity is based partly on the fact that his idiosyncrasies
- strike a chord in his nation's gastronomic soul. Rare is the
- U.S. diet doctor who would recommend a white bean, duck and
- sausage stew, but Montignac declares that "cassoulet is the
- noblest of dishes." A dollop of creme fraiche in one's soup
- does no harm, he argues. No wonder such epicureans as fashion
- designer Christian Lacroix and chef Bernard Loiseau have embraced
- the Montignac method. "You are never hungry," says restaurateur
- Paul Bocuse, who has lost 40 lbs. a la Montignac.
- </p>
- <p> On a recent morning, offering a tasting of dishes on his restaurant
- menu, Montignac charmed a procession of Parisian housewives.
- "Your chocolate mousse with fructose is pure genius," gushed
- Pauline Newmann-Laugier, whose husband, a financier, introduced
- her to the diet. "The best thing about Montignac," she said,
- leering at a cheesecake on the counter, is that "you don't feel
- guilty."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-