Conquering the Food Pyramid
About a century ago, malnutrition was a problem in our country.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture worked to educate the public
on the foods to eat in order to combat the problem. The first
food groups were born, and the number fluctuated through the
years from anywhere between four to twelve groups.
Around the mid-1970's, obesity and diet-related illnesses
dominated as a public health concern, and the USDA switched
gears, creating the Food Guide Pyramid. The food groups and
proportions were based on what was healthy for a young adult
male, which fit only a portion of the population.
Recently, a modernized version was released - MyPyramid. The new
version gives guidelines, but the challenge is making it
applicable to our lives. In short, what do we require to stay
healthy?
The key to nutritional health is variety. With the body
requiring about 40 essential nutrients and approximately 2,000
calories a day, shaking things up a little in the kitchen is the
optimum way to insure that you cover your nutritional bases.
With the Food Guide Pyramid, food groups place a particular food
item in one category. The reality is that foods don't always fit
that neatly into one slot. Cheese is found under "Dairy", but
protein and fat are also applicable categories. Healthy eating
requires knowledge of what makes up a food item, and then
planning meals accordingly.
Protein, fats, and carbohydrates are considered macronutrients.
Vitamins, minerals, and trace elements are micronutrients.
Nearly all foods contain a combination of two to three of the
macronutrients in their whole state. When foods are overly
processed and refined is when you begin to upset the balance of
good nutrition.
Protein should be approximately 15% of your total calories. Most
people automatically picture "meat" as the only choice, but
there are many foods rich in protein. Fish, dairy products,
beans, whole grains, and other plant foods provide a healthy
alternative. And, fish, poultry, and dairy products provide
higher percentages of protein per ounce than meat and eggs.
About 55-60% of your daily diet should be in the form of
carbohydrates. They are the body's chief source of energy.
A lot of food trends have taken their turn in the news through
the years. Eat more protein, eat less protein, stay away from
fats, and on and on it goes. Eating whole foods has been
consistently the fall-back for all of these "latest and
greatest" ideas, as it offers balance and consistency. Following
a whole foods eating plan is the most nutritionally sound choice
and much more simplistic than trying to figure out what
processed-food combinations will provide you what, if any,
nutrients. By staying as close to the natural state of a food as
possible, there are guaranteed to be the maximum amount of macro
and micronutrients needed for great health that your food
choices can provide.
A diet that is high in fiber and low in fats also alleviates the
need to count every calorie you eat. Losing body fat is one of
the best side effects of good nutrition!