Diet confusion & What to Eat
- Farm 2 Markt
- Jan 29, 2020
- 2 min read
You have a lot of diet choices. To name a few: fruitarian, pescetarian, lacto-ovo-vegetarian, vegan, flexitarian, etc. for various dietary schemes, I’ve noticed they have 3 things in common:
- Diet inventors or advocates insist their way of eating will prevent or cure diseases and syndromes, slim you down, increase your brain volume or your longevity, etc.
- Critics generally refute the claims on scientific grounds, citing different studies or critiquing the studies cited by the advocates.
- Testimonials from individuals who’ve tried the eating plan and say it improved their lives in some important way.
Many advocates have spun off a variety of money-making products and/or services related to their plans!
Many advocates have spun off a variety of money-making products and/or services related to their plans!
The whole business of wondering what to eat creates confusion.
WHAT TO EAT
A famous food writer summarized the business of deciding what to eat in seven words:
Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.
1. Eat food. By “food,” means real food, food your grandmother would recognize, food that readily spoils. Unprocessed or minimally processed foods, rather than the “edible food-like substances”.
Food from single ingredients combined into nutritious meals. Eating real food means not only choosing foods that don’t have many, if any, added ingredients, but also choosing foods that haven’t been denatured. Eating real foods requires scratch cooking and knowledge about what to buy, where to buy the ingredients you need within the constraints of your budget, and how to turn them into appetizing meals.
Knowledge, yes. A little planning, yes. But eating real food doesn’t require hours of slaving over a hot stove.
2. Not too much. “Never rushed eating and often eating while reading the newspaper or watching TV, all of which can lead to overeating.
someone suggest: leaving the table a little hungry, using smaller plates, putting your fork down on the table after each bite and chewing X number of times before swallowing, or eating five or six very small meals each day.
Filling a plate or bowl with a lot of green, red and yellow vegetables (and sometimes fruits, too). Lots of dry beans and lentils, which can pass as either/both proteins and vegetables. Vegetables make a meal look big and psychologically satisfying. Plus the nutrients, phytonutrients, and fiber in whole vegetables aren’t only important for health; the fiber helps feel full.
3. Mostly plants. Even a cursory glance at the histories of indigenous cultures have shown that humans can thrive on a range of local diets, from almost entirely animal-based to entirely plant based. Many people have begun choosing diets higher in plant foods for their health but also concerns for the sustainability of high meat consumption. These concerns extend to fish eating as well.
I highly recommend planting a garden of any size if you can, not just for the diversity of plant foods it will provide, but for the learning and the exercise involved, among many other benefits.
So what to eat? I say, stay with real food, as close to where it was raised as possible.
Eat plenty of variety, but only foods you enjoy.
Learn to cook the basics. Eat at home. Raise some of your own if you can.
How about you? Have you tried different diets? What do you think?
Yours in the garden Farm2Markt.
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