Everything old is new again...
Oct. 23rd, 2004 09:06 pmFrom the 16 March 2004 page of the Forgotten English Calendar:
"Banting: Doing Banting, reducing superfluous fat by living on [a] meat diet, and abstaining from beer, farinaceous food, and vegetables, according to the method adopted by William Banting...The word was introduced about 1864. - Ebenezer Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1898.
...
Death of William Banting (1797-1878)
corpulent London undertaker and cabinetmaker, who developed a successful weight-reduction regime for himself. In 1863 he published a pamphlet describing how he had lost forty-six pounds and twelve inches of girth by abstaining from most foods except meat. Many Victorians read his prescription, but few followed it-preferring to lace up their corsets instead. Nonetheless, the term "banting" became synonymous with weight loss and dieting..."
Interesting, eh?
"Banting: Doing Banting, reducing superfluous fat by living on [a] meat diet, and abstaining from beer, farinaceous food, and vegetables, according to the method adopted by William Banting...The word was introduced about 1864. - Ebenezer Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 1898.
...
Death of William Banting (1797-1878)
corpulent London undertaker and cabinetmaker, who developed a successful weight-reduction regime for himself. In 1863 he published a pamphlet describing how he had lost forty-six pounds and twelve inches of girth by abstaining from most foods except meat. Many Victorians read his prescription, but few followed it-preferring to lace up their corsets instead. Nonetheless, the term "banting" became synonymous with weight loss and dieting..."
Interesting, eh?