Diet For A Small Planet -
One of the book’s most famous concepts was —the idea that vegetarians must pair specific foods (like rice and beans) in a single meal to get "complete" protein.
: World hunger is a result of ineffective food policy and the uneven distribution of resources, not a biological inability to grow enough food. Diet for a Small Planet
The Original Food Revolution: Exploring "Diet for a Small Planet" One of the book’s most famous concepts was
When Frances Moore Lappé published Diet for a Small Planet in 1971, she didn’t just write a cookbook; she sparked a political and ecological revolution. Selling over three million copies, the book challenged the narrative that world hunger was inevitable due to a lack of food, instead pointing to a wasteful, meat-centered industrial food system as the true culprit. The Core Argument: Efficiency and Equity Selling over three million copies, the book challenged
Lappé’s central thesis remains as relevant today as it was 50 years ago: feeding grain to livestock is an incredibly inefficient way to nourish a growing population. By shifting toward a plant-centered diet, we can significantly reduce the "environmental toll" of agriculture.
: Every meal is a "symbolic act" and a form of power to influence global health and democracy. Debunking the "Protein Complementarity" Myth