Yes. The DGA also nicely outlined three different “dietary patterns” that would help achieve these suggestions. *Note, these are not diets, cleanses or superfoods. We’re talking lifelong ‘patterns’ of
eating. The reason Mediterranean and Vegetarian patterns are included is due to research showing
people who follow these patterns of eating have lower body weight, longer lives, and overall better health.
Healthy American - This is what we would eat in a perfect world. Nice appropriate portion sizes of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean protein and dairy.
Mediterranean - Also emphasizes the five food groups, but favors beans, legumes, nuts and seafood over poultry, red meat and dairy. Big fans of “healthy fats” like olive oil, avocado and nuts.
Healthy Vegetarian - Takes out meat, poultry and seafood altogether and replaces it with soy, legumes, nuts and seeds. Again, emphasizes five food groups.
Check out this chart, which shows how these three eating patterns are almost exactly the same.
What’s the bottom line?
These three patterns all emphasize the same two points --
- Maximize on nutrient dense foods like fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean protein and dairy.
- Highly limit your discretionary calories to less than 200 a day, if that.
So next time see an ad or article for the latest diet trend, take a deep breath and come back to the research.. In the end, it’s very simple-- eat from the five food groups every day, and keep an eye on portions!