Why This Book Matters
Most diet advice was designed for men and adjusted for women as an afterthought. The calorie-counting framework, the idea that weight loss is purely a math problem of intake versus output — these were built on metabolic models developed in mostly male research populations, then applied to female bodies that operate on a fundamentally different clock. Women’s bodies are not running on a stable 24-hour metabolic rhythm. They are running on a monthly hormonal cycle that changes what the body needs, how it processes food, and what it stores or burns — every single week.
Eat Like a Girl is Dr. Mindy Pelz’s case for eating in sync with that cycle. It is the companion volume to her earlier Fast Like a Girl, which established a fasting framework mapped to the menstrual cycle. Where the first book addressed when to eat, this one addresses what to eat — and specifically how food choices should shift based on which hormones are dominant at any given phase. The book’s most important contribution is not any specific food list. It is the reframe: the symptoms women have been told to push through or medicate — the pre-period carbohydrate craving, the post-ovulation bloating, the perimenopausal sleeplessness and weight gain — are not personal failures or inevitable aging. They are hormonal signals pointing toward specific, addressable imbalances.
Pelz is a chiropractor by training, not an endocrinologist, and that matters when evaluating her scientific claims. But the practical framework she has developed over years of clinical work and an enormous online community of women experimenting with these ideas is genuinely useful, even where the underlying mechanisms are more contested than she acknowledges.
Core Framework
The Hormonal Hierarchy
Pelz organizes hormonal function around a cascade she calls the Hormonal Hierarchy. At the top is oxytocin — the safety, connection, and bonding hormone. Oxytocin suppresses cortisol. Cortisol, when chronically elevated, drives insulin resistance. Insulin resistance disrupts the sex hormones: estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone.
The practical implication is that any dietary approach that tries to balance sex hormones while ignoring blood sugar and cortisol is treating downstream effects rather than root causes. A woman eating perfectly by macro standards but sleeping five hours a night, working in a high-stress environment, and skipping meals — her cortisol spike from that lifestyle will overwhelm whatever food choices she makes. The hierarchy gives her a framework for understanding why her “clean diet” is not producing the results she expects.
Blood sugar is the most actionable lever in the hierarchy, and Pelz’s shift away from calorie counting toward glycemic impact is one of the book’s most useful reframes. Every food choice that creates a large glucose spike triggers a compensatory insulin surge. Repetition of those surges leads to insulin resistance. Insulin resistance deranges sex hormone production. Tracking glycemic impact rather than calories changes the entire decision framework — and it produces meaningful metabolic improvements for most women even before cycle syncing is introduced.
The Fasting Cycle: Four Phases, Two Eating Styles
The book’s structural core is the Fasting Cycle — a map of the menstrual cycle divided into four phases, each with its own fasting window and eating style.
Power Phase 1 (Days 1–10): Hormones are low and estrogen is building. The body can tolerate longer fasting windows — 13 to 72 hours — without the cortisol spike suppressing hormonal activity. Eating style: ketobiotic (under 50 grams net carbs from whole plant sources, 75+ grams protein, healthy fats at every meal).
Manifestation Phase (Days 11–15 / ovulation): Estrogen, testosterone, and a pulse of progesterone all peak simultaneously. This is Pelz’s highest-hormone moment — the time when fasting should be shortest (13–15 hours maximum) to avoid cortisol interference. Eating style: hormone feasting (150+ grams carbs from whole-food sources, emphasis on diverse proteins for full amino acid coverage).
Power Phase 2 (Days 16–19): Post-ovulation, hormones dip before progesterone rises. The body can return to longer fasting windows. Eating style: ketobiotic, with added emphasis on foods that support estrogen detox — bitter greens, cruciferous vegetables, fermented foods.
Nurture Phase (Days 20 through the first day of the next period): Progesterone peaks. Progesterone is a calm, restorative hormone, but it requires a low-cortisol environment to do its work. Fasting during this phase raises cortisol and suppresses progesterone. Pelz’s instruction: no fasting, hormone feasting. Carbohydrate cravings during this phase are a hormonal signal, not a willpower failure.
For women who do not cycle — due to menopause, surgical intervention, hormonal contraception, or cycle loss — Pelz maps the same framework to the moon cycle: new moon as Day 1, full moon as Day 14.
Key Ideas
Carb Cravings Are Hormonal Communication
This is the reframe that stops many women cold the first time they encounter it. The intense desire for carbohydrates in the week before menstruation is not a character flaw. It is progesterone’s way of telling the body it needs more glucose. Progesterone is a hormone that requires carbohydrates to peak appropriately, and the body’s craving is a request — specific, physiologically grounded, and meaningful.
The relevant question, Pelz argues, is not whether to honor the craving but how. Processed carbohydrates — cookies, crackers, bread — satisfy the craving chemically while delivering excitotoxins (MSG, aspartame, artificial additives) that raise cortisol and directly suppress progesterone. Whole-food carbohydrates — sweet potatoes, bananas, root vegetables, dark chocolate above 70 percent cacao — satisfy the same hormonal need without the cortisol spike. The difference in outcome for a woman’s pre-period experience can be substantial.
For anyone who has spent years treating their pre-period hunger as a problem to be controlled rather than a signal to be answered intelligently, this reframe is genuinely disorienting in the best possible way.
The Estrobolome: Why Gut Health Is a Hormonal Issue
The estrobolome is the specific community of gut bacteria whose job is to break down estrogen and convert it into a format usable by cells. Without a healthy estrobolome, estrogen cannot be metabolized efficiently — and unmetabolized estrogen is stored as fat, particularly in the belly and breast tissue. This connection between gut bacteria and hormonal symptom load is one of the book’s most scientifically grounded sections and one of the most underappreciated ideas in women’s health writing.
The estrobolome is depleted by a familiar list of modern factors: antibiotics (in medications and food), birth control pills, alcohol, highly processed diets, and environmental pollutants. This means that many of the hormonal symptoms women attribute to “estrogen dominance” or “low estrogen” may actually reflect impaired estrogen metabolism — a problem addressable through the gut rather than through prescription hormones.
Pelz’s rebuild protocol is the Three Ps: probiotics (raw fermented yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, kimchi, miso, tempeh), prebiotics (garlic, onions, leeks, asparagus, dandelion greens, flaxseed, chicory root), and polyphenols (dark chocolate, berries, cloves, green tea, olives, flaxseed meal, artichokes). The three categories work synergistically: probiotics introduce new beneficial strains, prebiotics feed and strengthen existing bacteria, and polyphenols specifically regrow the hormone-metabolizing strains of the estrobolome.
Ketobiotic Eating: Modified Keto That Keeps the Plants
Pelz’s ketobiotic approach is worth distinguishing from conventional ketogenic diets, because it departs from keto in the one way that matters most for long-term adherence and hormonal health. Standard keto eliminates or severely restricts all carbohydrates, including from vegetables and fruit. Ketobiotic keeps net carbohydrates at or below 50 grams per day but draws all of those carbohydrates from whole plant sources: leafy greens, cruciferous vegetables, berries, kiwi, cantaloupe, avocado.
The practical difference is substantial. A ketobiotic plate is built around vegetables with protein and healthy fat — not around bacon and cheese. The fiber and phytonutrients in those vegetables directly support the estrobolome (Rule 2) and the liver’s hormone detoxification function (Rule 3). A conventional ketogenic diet, despite producing insulin sensitivity improvements, can deplete the gut microbiome and impair estrogen metabolism if it is not also rich in plant foods.
Pelz’s protein target of 75 grams minimum per day — scaling up to 1 gram per pound of ideal body weight for muscle building — is consistent with emerging research on protein requirements for women, particularly perimenopausal and post-menopausal women at risk of muscle loss. More muscle means more insulin receptor sites, better glucose utilization, and reduced fat storage. This is one of the areas where the book’s guidance aligns well with mainstream evidence.
Alcohol and the Menopausal Liver
Pelz makes a point about alcohol that is clinically important and not often stated directly enough: alcohol temporarily halts the liver’s ability to metabolize hormones. Not impairs — halts. While the liver is processing alcohol as the toxin it is, it is not breaking down estrogen, progesterone, cortisol, or thyroid hormones. Once the alcohol is cleared, it resumes. The problem is the timing.
For perimenopausal women already experiencing declining progesterone and rising anxiety, the nightly glass of wine to take the edge off is almost certainly making the underlying hormonal situation worse. The anxiolytic effect of the alcohol is real and short-term. The suppression of hormone metabolism during the liver’s detox window, night after night, compounds the very anxiety it is being used to address. Pelz’s suggested maximum for perimenopausal and post-menopausal women is two drinks per week. For many of the women this book targets, that number is substantially lower than their current intake.
Menopause as Navigation, Not Deficiency
The book’s most valuable section for its primary audience is the chapter on menopause and the guidance for women who no longer cycle. Rather than framing menopause as a hormone deficiency requiring replacement, Pelz frames it as a navigation challenge: the body is shifting its primary hormone production site from the ovaries to the adrenal glands, and symptoms reflect how well or poorly that transition is supported by lifestyle.
The symptom-mapping framework is specifically useful: hot flashes, night sweats, vaginal dryness, cognitive changes, and bone loss indicate declining estradiol and call for more ketobiotic days. Insomnia, anxiety, breast tenderness, increased hunger, and difficulty fasting indicate declining progesterone and call for more hormone feasting days and less fasting. For a post-menopausal woman whose symptoms shift week to week, this gives her a decision framework that is responsive to what her body is signaling rather than fixed to a protocol designed for a body that no longer applies.
Notable Quotes
“Your hormones are not a negative part of your humanness; they are your superpowers. The fact that you can be happy one moment, then crying the next is part of your authentic feminine nature. Your hormonal landscape is intricate and sophisticated.” — Chapter 7
One of the book’s most direct challenges to the cultural framing of hormonal variability as pathology. Pelz is making a structural argument: emotional range is hormonal information, not disorder.
“One reason so many women are experiencing a dysregulation in their metabolic systems is because they’ve been trained to count calories to lose weight. A low-calorie diet can still create mayhem in your metabolic system. Focusing on blood sugar puts not only your metabolic system back into harmony but it can also calm a raging nervous system and regulate even the craziest of hormonal challenges.” — Chapter 1
The foundational reframe. Caloric deficit is insufficient as a metabolic model for women because it ignores the hormonal cascade triggered by blood sugar spikes.
“Belly fat is a huge burden for many women, especially menopausal women… Perhaps the worst part about belly fat is that you can’t diet or exercise your way out of it. That’s because this is one of the areas where your body stores all the excess hormones it can’t metabolize and detox out of you, especially cortisol and estrogen.” — Chapter 3
This repositions belly fat as a hormone storage and metabolism problem rather than a caloric surplus problem — which changes both the intervention and the self-blame calculus for women who have tried everything and not moved it.
“When you drink, you temporarily halt your liver’s ability to metabolize hormones. Once your liver has cleared the alcohol, it will go back to the business of breaking down hormones. Where I see this challenging women the most is during their perimenopausal years.” — Chapter 3
A clinically useful point that is rarely stated this directly in popular health writing. The nightly glass of wine is not a neutral coping tool for hormonal anxiety — it is actively compounding the problem.
“The carbohydrate cravings many women experience during the Nurture Phase are not a failure of willpower. They are a hormonal signal that your body needs more glucose and a wider range of amino acids to support rising progesterone.” — Chapter 8
The single most useful reframe in the book for the specific experience of pre-period hunger. The craving is not a character problem. It is a hormonal request.
“If you learn to eat like a girl — in a way that helps you produce, metabolize, and detox your hormones — you will find yourself living in a body you love.” — Chapter 3
The book’s organizing promise. Worth holding alongside the critical note: for women with access to a cycle, specific food sensitivities, and the capacity to track and experiment, this promise is meaningfully achievable. It is overstated as a universal outcome.
“The estrobolome is the specific community of gut bacteria whose job is to break down estrogen. Without these key microbes, estrogen can’t get reformatted for cellular use.” — Chapter 3
The concept that most readers will not have encountered before and that has the most immediate practical implications — particularly for women who have had significant antibiotic exposure, years on oral contraceptives, or a history of highly processed eating.
Who Should Read This
This book is most useful for cycling women between roughly 30 and 55 who have already tried conventional dietary approaches and found them inadequate — women whose bodies seem to behave unpredictably in ways that calorie counting does not explain, and who want a framework that accounts for the monthly variation they are actually experiencing.
It is particularly well-suited for perimenopausal women (roughly ages 40–55) who are dealing with new or worsening symptoms — weight gain that will not move, sleep disruption, anxiety, mood volatility, brain fog — and who want a lifestyle-based framework to explore before or alongside conversations with a healthcare provider about hormone therapy.
Women on hormonal contraceptives will find the book less immediately applicable, since their natural cycle is suppressed, though Pelz’s general nutritional principles and food quality guidance are valuable regardless of cycle status.
Women primarily dealing with disordered eating, binge eating, or a history of restriction-driven cycles should approach this book with caution. The framework is not designed for these dynamics, and the emphasis on food quality, fasting, and phase-based restriction could compound existing difficulties without the right support in place. The books in this library better suited to that work include Intuitive Eating, Breaking Free from Emotional Eating, and The DBT Solution for Emotional Eating.
Related Books
- Fast Like a Girl — Mindy Pelz: The companion volume on when to eat and fast across the cycle. Essential reading alongside this one; the two books form a complete framework.
- Intuitive Eating — Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch (review on ExcessMatters): The framework most in tension with Pelz’s structured approach. For women whose relationship with food involves restriction history, intuitive eating principles are a necessary counterweight to any protocol-based system.
- Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy — Walter Willett (review on ExcessMatters): More rigorous evidence base for nutritional guidance. A useful companion for readers who want the research foundation under Pelz’s recommendations.
- Bright Line Eating — Susan Peirce Thompson (review on ExcessMatters): Another structured eating framework that also dismisses calorie counting in favor of a metabolic reframe. Thompson addresses food addiction neuroscience; Pelz addresses hormonal rhythm.
- Breaking Free from Emotional Eating — Geneen Roth (review on ExcessMatters): For readers whose primary relationship with the pre-period carbohydrate craving is emotional and shame-based rather than physiological, Roth is the more important starting point.