barfblog

safe food from farm to fork

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Blog
  • Categories
    • Allergies
    • Animal Welfare
    • Animals
    • Celebrity
    • E. coli
    • Food Safety Culture
    • Food Safety Policy
    • Functional Food
    • Genetic Engineering
    • Handwashing
    • Hepatitis A
    • Listeria
    • Norovirus
    • Other Microorganisms
    • Pesticides
    • Plants
    • Raw Food
    • Restaurant Inspection
    • Salmonella
    • Thermometers
    • Wacky and Weird
  • Infosheets
    • English
    • Español
    • Français
  • About Us

Tag Archives: 64

Rule 65: Don’t pay attention to lists of things to eat and not to eat

Posted on January 10, 2010 by Douglas Powell
Reply

Journalist Michael Pollan has polled readers and come up with 64 rules to govern eating.

But he forgot the most important one: ignore lists.

Posted in Food Safety Policy | Tagged 64, eat, Food, list, michael, Pollan | Leave a reply

Doug’s personal page

Doug’s Dead Flowers

Mailing Lists

barfblog Alerts

Get every new post delivered to your inbox as soon as it gets published! sign up »

barfblog Weekly

A weekly digest of food safety news from barfblog and around the web. sign up »

Archives

Categories

Contributors

Dr. Doug PowellDr. Douglas Powell is a former professor of food safety and the publisher of barfblog.com. Powell is passionate about... more »

Dr. Ben ChapmanDr. Ben Chapman is an associate professor and food safety extension specialist at North Carolina State University. He's interested in learning from... more »

Tags

Australia Barf Campylobacter Canada Cantaloupe Cdc Cfia Chicken China Cryptosporidium Death Disclosure e. coli O157 e coli Egg Fda food safety France Hamburger handwashing hepatitis A Illness inspection listeria Mammoth Burger New Zealand norovirus Outbreak Petting Zoo policy Poop Produce Raw raw milk restaurant inspection Risk Communication salmonella Sprouts Stec Surveillance thermometer Turkey Uk Vomit Water

Subscribe via RSS

  • All Posts
  • Comments
Copyright ©2025 Doug Powell and Ben Chapman