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The Sneaky Chef: How to Cheat on Your Man (In the Kitchen!): Hiding Healthy Foods in Hearty Meals Any Guy Will Love

The Sneaky Chef: How to Cheat on Your Man (In the Kitchen!): Hiding Healthy Foods in Hearty Meals Any Guy Will Love

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Author: Missy Chase Lapine
Publisher: Running Press
Category: Book

List Price: $19.95
Buy New: $4.07
You Save: $15.88 (80%)



New (40) Used (11) from $4.07

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
Sales Rank: 13867

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 272
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.7 x 7.8 x 1.1

ISBN: 0762433205
Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5081
EAN: 9780762433209
ASIN: 0762433205

Publication Date: March 24, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! NEW Book! May have remainder mark. Most orders ship within 1 BUSINESS DAY with ORDER CONFIRMATION.

Similar Items:

  • The Sneaky Chef: Simple Strategies for Hiding Healthy Foods in Kids' Favorite Meals
  • Deceptively Delicious: Simple Secrets to Get Your Kids Eating Good Food
  • Sneaky Veggies: How to Get Vegetables Under the Radar & Into Your Family
  • Hungry Girl: Recipes and Survival Strategies for Guilt-Free Eating in the Real World
  • The Healthy Lunchbox

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The Sneaky Chef now targets the other picky eater in the family! For parents of finicky eaters, The Sneaky Chef was the answer to their prayers, giving them solutions for hiding healthy food in the meals kids crave. Within a month of publication, it was a New York Times bestseller. But author Missy Chase Lapine knew another secret: the kids aren’t the only ones in the family not eating their veggies! Hundreds of women wrote to tell her how the men in their lives were consistently making poor choices when it came to their diet. Men know they should eat better, but the classic male perception is that fruits and veggies are “rabbit food” and don’t seem to satisfy their appetite. Now “The Sneaky Chef” has donned her apron again and developed delicious recipes that are sure to appeal to guys. Recipes include “Macho Meatballs,” “Love Me Tenderloin,” and “Champion Chili.” These hearty meals successfully cloak ingredients that specifically target men’s health issues: foods proven to help the heart, lower cholesterol, ensure a healthy prostate, and other concerns. Now everyone in the family (kids and adults alike) can benefit from The Sneaky Chef’s bag of tricks.



Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Good idea but too much work   October 3, 2008
I thought this would be a great book for my son but it's just too much work. You have to premake some ingridents (and freeze them for future use) and then make the receipe. It's just too much work! I need something easier!


5 out of 5 stars How to Add Baby Food into Your Meals   September 19, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I think that should be the titles for this book, but then who would buy it?

I love making fresh baby food for my kids when they were young. I stopped because there wasn't a need anymore. I'm glad this book came out and I've discovered making baby food blends is just as fulfilling.

The book is about adding nutritious foods into your family's diet without their knowledge and it's not about revamping their diets. DH is borderline diabetic and I've tried to get him to eat more beans, cinnamon, fibers, you name it, but he has refused or claims, he can not eat those food (or too much of them).

Last night, I made the 'Radical Ribs' with the 'Basic marinade for Fish, Chicken, & Pork', 'Sweet & Sour Sauce', and 'Re-vamped bottled BBQ sauce.' I made the Orange puree (carrots/yam) and got a bottle of pomegranate juice (at my local produce store) which were required to make the 'Radical Ribs' and the sauces. DH was really excited when I showed him his packed lunch: ribs, steam rice, steamed corn& peas and fruit salad. 7yr DS got a smaller version for his lunch and there was lots of 'Ohhs' and 'Ahhs' about their lunches this morning. They know how to make their mom feel happy.

The ribs tastes like store purchased ribs, but it actually has about 3/4 cup of pureed carrots/yams on them. I can't wait to try out more recipes from this book. I also have checked out the 'kids' version, but my picky 7yr DS won't eat those recipes, he eats like his dad. The recipes in this book are better than the 'kids' version (MHO).

In summary, it's about slowly adding more fiber & nutrients into your family's diet without added hardship. They are going to eat ... (ribs, fried chicken, french fries, chili, chowder, shakes, margaritas (adults only), etc.); why not add some baby food/juice in them and here's how! Nice book, check it out at the library if you don't believe me.



1 out of 5 stars A sick title, a sick view of relationships   September 2, 2008
 0 out of 18 found this review helpful

What a poor, poor reflection on our society when anyone would author a book titled, "How to Cheat." Terrible. Is this dishonesty really meant to be out of love? Why anyone, male or female, would want to cheat at anything in their relationship is beyond me. What a shame. Why not try honesty instead? As a marriage counselor I would have much less work if more people did just that.
A shame, on so many levels.



5 out of 5 stars A winning strategy in the kitchen for more than just men   August 13, 2008
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

First off, truth be told, I'm not a man at all. I just happen to be a very picky adult woman who can't stomach eating whole vegetables. Health issues spurred me to make some changes in my diet, namely to include more vegetables and fiber. This was a tall order for me, but I'd been hearing rave reviews for books like these and Jessica Seinfeld's "Deceptively Delicious" which make a point of including disguised vegetables pureed seamlessly into the foods I happen to love--which also tend, very often, to be incredibly bad for you. This was a strategy I could live with. If it worked, so much the better; if it didn't, at worst it would be a failed experiment in cooking (to add to my always-growing pile of such experiments).

I looked into the original Sneaky Chef, this book, and several others of the same type before settling on this "men's health" edition, not only because it addressed my own problems but also because I probably eat more of what Lapine calls "man food" than most men I know. The introduction, where she talks about the different emphases men and women place on food and the tastes, sights and textures that appeal to them, I swear could've been written about me.

This was what sold me on the book: though there seems to be little love lost between Lapine and the eating habits of what she calls the "typical man", she writes not without understanding. In fact, simply trying a few of the recipes proves that she does, in fact, have a consummate understanding of what makes foods delicious to men AND women as well as what would make them healthier. The blueberry muffins include no butter and are sweetened with only vanilla extract, cinnamon and 1/4 cup sugar in addition to the blueberries, and are loaded with white beans, whole wheat flour, and oat bran, but amazingly, to eat these muffins is to make no sacrifice of flavor. They smell heavenly in the oven and taste just as good out of it. Ditto the Bolognese sauce: while it simmered, I couldn't stop tasting it while adding involuntary "mmm"s. One serving of the sauce over whole wheat pasta makes for a delicious, filling and healthy meal that will give you energy for hours. I've also tried the sesame noodles, pesto pizza and quick stovetop popcorn, all of which were astounding successes!

Lapine is batting a thousand in my book. Now I can feel good about the food I'm eating without feeling deprived by a "diet", and all these recipes have the convenient feature of broadening the taste horizons of the picky man in my own life, who's as committed as I am to changing our habits and living more healthfully. To give us more recipes for healthy treats, I've got the original Sneaky Chef on the way to my house. If the original is half as helpful as its sequel, we'll be pleased.

Bravo to Missy Chase Lapine! Your recipes have achieved what years' worth of my doctors and nutritionists, not to mention my parents, dismissed as a pipe dream: made me eat vegetables... and like them! This is a system that works for more than just the men in your life--it'll work for you too.



1 out of 5 stars The Only Thing Sneaky........   July 14, 2008
 6 out of 21 found this review helpful

Sneaky Veggies: How to Get Vegetables Under the Radar & Into Your Family

The only thing Sneaky is that the idea is not new. Chris Fisk, a trained chef and bona fide author wrote Sneaky Veggies long before either of the mud-slingers did. Fisk's book is written from a standpoint of sound nutrition, simple and clear KITCHEN TESTED recipies, and a seemingly heartfelt interest in teaching people to feed themselves well. That's not what I glean from either of the copy-cats. I wish them both well, but I believe that the superior of the three books is Fisk's Sneaky Veggies.


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