| We read so much
about what is good for us, then it is not good for us,
more research is conducted and we find out that now we
need to change our eating habits and style again, and
so it continues. You would think that we would all be
thin. But that does not seem to be the case. Studies have
shown that the populations (of western societies) have
grown heavier and less healthy in the last decade. Some
researchers call our present situation a form of high-tech
malnutrition.
Researchers have gained critical insights into diet and
health over the years. They claim that the USDA’s
pyramid seems to be flawed. The original Food Guide Pyramid
is as follows:
Milk,
yogurt,
cheese
Meat,
poultry,
fish,
dry
beans,
eggs
and
nuts
Vegetables
Fruit
Bread,
cereal,
rice
and
pasta
Looks
like
a
good,
well-balanced
diet,
does
it
not?
No,
apparently
this
pyramid
seems
to
have
some
controversial
features;
it
encourages
the
use
of
calorie-rich
vegetable
oils
and
discourages
eating
potatoes
and
white
rice.
The
USDA’s
pyramid
implies
that
all
fats
are
dangerous
and
most
carbohydrates
are
safe.
In
contrast
to
this
finding,
more
recent
research
has
shown
that
carbohydrates
can
be
as
deadly
as
fats.
Another pyramid of recent origins, devised by Dr. Walter
Willett and other staff at the Harvard School of Public
Health, promotes the message, “Eat, drink and be
healthy.” This new pyramid is called “The
Healthy Eating Pyramid;” it breaks up groups of
fats or carbohydrates or proteins to highlight the best
and worst sources of those nutrients
Scientists have known since the 1960’s that the
fat in red meat and dairy products can raise cholesterol
levels and promote coronary disease. Studies have shown
that unlike butter and lard, the oils found in fish, nuts
and vegetables help protect against heart disease.
For some time now, food-makers have realized the potential
of low-fat processed foods. Cereal grains are much more
appealing when they are puffed, sweetened and put into
a box with a picture on the front and a toy inside, and
you can charge more. Low-fat cakes, cookies and snacks
flooded the market in the early 1990’s, and consumers
simply added them to what they were already eating. Consumers
assumed that anything low in fat must be harmless. While
the government health organization promoted lean meats
and low-fat dairy products, it neglected to think of snacks.
The calories and the way carbohydrates are digested
are the problems. Whole grains break down slowly in the
digestive system, but refined grains flood into the bloodstream
as glucose. If the glucose is not used to fuel activity,
the body produces a burst of insulin which goes out of
circulation and goes into fat and muscle cells for storage.
A diet rich in refined carbohydrates and simple sugars
can erode the system. Cells become more resistant to insulin
and force the body to produce it in even greater amounts.
Eventually the system breaks down and results in diabetes
and fosters heart disease. An occasional glucose surge
can be alright for a lean, active person, but it adds
fat to an inactive body.
Weight management is critical. Daily exercise and weight
control are basic to good health. For most people the
best strategy is to boycott junk food. If you give up
processed foods in favor of whole foods, you can shed
several hundred calories a day. According to Dr. Willette,
even the baked potato is a better nutritional bargain
than almost anything that comes in a package. A baked
potato with its skin on provides a full belly, vitamins,
minerals, and fiber - 150 calories. Whereas a bag of chips
can carry about 500 calories.
Eat plenty of vegetable - the USDA endorses them. When
you eat plenty of vegetables, the healthful diet starts
to look different. The Asian diet and the traditional
Mediterranean diet abound in fish, nuts and olive oil,
and both the Asian and Mediterranean diets are considered
models of good eating. Both diets rely on plants and fishes
for fat. Both include some refined grains, but neither
treats cinnabuns as a food group.
You need to devise an eating plan that embraces healthy
cuisines and discourages excess food intake. You can enjoy
good carbohydrates (whole-grain foods) and good fats (plant
oils). Fast-burning carbohydrates are contained in red
meat. In the Healthy Eating Pyramid, nuts and legumes
are at the top of the hierarchy, followed by fish, poultry
and eggs. Dairy products can be optional if replaced by
a calcium supplement.
There are critics of the Healthy Eating Pyramid, but
it is considered a definite step in the right direction
by many. It may take more than a healthy pyramid to improve
your diet, but if you are aware of the facts and are aware
that eating well is more fun than eating badly, it is
a start in the right direction.
So, after all the research, new discoveries, and controversies,
what should we do? My suggestions is to stay away from prepared,
packaged foods and “Eat, drink and be healthy!”
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