More protein, dairy: Trump admin unveils 5-year update to dietary guidelines - beef gud

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Summary​

Inverted pyramid​

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. joked that the food pyramid is now flipped to emphasize a focus on proteins, dairy, red meats, vegetables and fruits.

Guidelines used for federal programs​

Officials noted that the guidelines aren’t just an encouragement for families, but a framework for what’s permissible in several federal nutrition and assistance programs.

Fight chronic illnesses​

The new guidance focused on reducing the risk of chronic diseases such as obesity and certain heart conditions.

Full story​

Trump administration health officials released a new set of dietary guidelines they said would promote healthy eating habits and reduce the need for medications and disease diagnoses. The plan is much more condensed than prior editions, but it pushes the same message for Americans to consume nutrient-rich foods.

“Eat real food,” that’s the directive U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. issued Wednesday in announcing the new recommendations, often declaring a “war” on saturated fats and added sugars.

“A new framework centers on protein and health fats, vegetables, fruits and whole grains,” Kennedy said.

Kennedy called the new guidelines “the most significant reset of federal nutrition policy in history.” He said that the departments worked with “MAHA Moms” and public health advocates to redevelop guidelines.

The food guidelines would be used to determine what foods the military and children in public schools get and what’s permissible for purchase with benefits, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said.

USDA and HHS secretaries are required to update dietary guidelines at least once every five years.

Secretaries for the U.S. Departments of Agriculture and Health and Human Services are required to update guidelines at least every five years. They are used to build mandates on what foods are considered sufficient for use in a number of federal nutrition and welfare programs.

Flipping the food pyramid on its head​

Kennedy joked during the briefing that the new recommendations returned the food pyramid to its original orientation, prioritizing protein-rich foods, dairy products, fruit, vegetables and healthy fats.

He criticized former editions of the guidelines for “promoting” processed foods due to the former pyramid placing fats, oils and sweets atop the triangle, but they’re meant to be consumed sparingly. The 2020 release of dietary guidelines didn’t promote such foods, however. Several sections in the document urged people to limit or avoid processed meats and soy products due to higher levels of sodium and saturated fats.

“Replacing processed or high-fat meats (e.g., hot dogs, sausages, bacon) with seafood could help lower intake of saturated fat and sodium, nutrients that are often consumed in excess of recommended limits,” according to the former recommendations.

USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins said during the press conference that people should now eat more protein, dairy, healthy fats, whole grains, fruits and vegetables — whether fresh, frozen, canned or dried.

“These dietary guidelines are foundational to so many USDA programs, and their introductions marks the first step in connecting America’s schools and dinner plates to the best of American agriculture,” Rollins said.

It also contains a promotion for people to drink whole milk versus other versions, but research has shown that the milks range in nutritional value based on a person’s individual health.

George Mason University College of Public Health nutrition professor Sapna Batheja wrote that research on whole milk is mixed, as it contains higher amounts of saturated fat, which can raise low-density lipoprotein cholesterol. This has been labeled as a risk factor for heart disease.

“For most adults, low-fat or fat-free dairy is recommended to limit unhealthy saturated fat while still getting essential nutrients,” Batheja wrote. “For children under two, whole milk is generally recommended for brain development, unless otherwise directed by a health care provider. For those who are lactose intolerant, lactose-free milk or plant milks fortified with vitamins and nutrients (like soy milk) are good alternatives.”

Guidelines sought to fight rising cases of chronic illnesses​

The updated guidelines were issued, officials said, in an effort to combat the rising numbers of people diagnosed with chronic illnesses. Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz said the driver behind the change was lessening chronic illnesses in the country.

“The best way to reduce drug spend in America is to not need the drugs in the first place,” Oz said.

He sought the plan to reduce people’s necessity for weight-loss drugs and those for autoimmune problems.

It’s a push that past secretaries and administrators appear to be on the same page about, according to older editions of the dietary guidelines. A number of health organizations like Johns Hopkins Medicine, University of California Los Angeles Health and Harvard University Medical School urge people with a chronic disease to consume foods that reduce inflammation and increase intake of fruits and vegetables.


Foods that cause inflammation are red meat, processed meats, deep-fried foods, foods high in added sugars, baked goods made with white flour and others.

“It can seem challenging at first to eat for lower inflammation with so many inflammatory foods commercially available, but over time, small changes can turn into lasting habits,” according to Johns Hopkins Medicine. “While no one food reduces inflammation, building a healthy, holistic dietary pattern can help lower your risk of inflammatory disease and transform your health.”

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Inverted pyramid​

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. joked that the food pyramid is now flipped to emphasize a focus on proteins, dairy, red meats, vegetables and fruits.
Wasn't there a south park episode about inverting the food pyramid?

I see that "real cheese" summoned null to feature this.
 
If Kamala won the election there would be G-Fuel and Estradiol on the pyramid. The greatest lolcows live in that magical place where HAES and HRT collide.
 
I think it wouldve been better to do away with the idea of a 'food pyramid' in general and encourage healthy eating which is far more complex than what can be summarized with an upside down triangle.
But it's true that protein and veggies are way better for you than bread.
 
Cheers bro, I'll eat some cheese to that. Have some pecorino romano and cottswold with chives in the fridge I just set on the counter to warm up.
 
Coffee creamer, should be at most Dairy, sugar, flavor
Coffee creamed should be destroyed. If you want to add something sweet that softens the flavour of your coffee you can add milk or cream. Both milk and especially cream are already sweet so there's no need for the extra sugar, plus they're both 100% made of themselves so there's no need for artificial flavouring.
 
It also has more calories and I'm trying to undo some holiday indulgence damage to my waistline.
Maybe once I sort that out, I'll change, though honestly anything richer than 2% seems a bit much.
Only like 40-60 more calories for 12 fl oz.
 
One of the big problem with grains is how they are made. We expect to be able to walk into a store and buy bread that's been sitting on the shelf in a bag for two weeks after sitting in a truck and a series of warehouses for a month and have it be 'fresh'. Real bread goes stale in a few days. This is why dishes like french toast (pain perdu - lost bread) and breadcrumbs exist - it's what you would do with the bread once it got stale. We don't have local bakeries anymore because everybody is eating frankenbread that's made in a factory and is awful for you, but which puts competitors out of business due to economic/convenience considerations.

I remember when our local supermarket chain was still expanded they built in-house bakeries which cooked fresh baguettes every day and they were great. One day I took one home and just went 'what the fuck is this, it tastes like cardboard'. I asked someone I knew who worked in their bakery department and she said that corporate said that the way they did it was 'inefficient' - so they tested baguettes with a longer shelf life, started making them at a central location, and distributing them to the stores while the store focused on desserts with a longer shelf life. Never bought a loaf of bread there again and eventually stopped shopping there entirely. This happens anytime the bean counters get control at a grocery location, and once it gets centralized or bought out by a bigger corporate entity they will always get control.

I started making sourdough from older, lower-gluten grains like Einkorn and it's amazing the difference it makes in how you feel after eating it and how your body responds to it (not getting fat, building muscle). I always thought that eggs and bacon are bad for you shit was bullshit because my great aunts and uncles and grandparents ate that every day, were always healthy, and lived into their 80s and 90s. I also think the bread-is-the-devil shit is bullshit as well because it was always a staple in the Western world and people were fine. Asians eat a shitton of rice and are skinny. I do think that industrializing and centralizing our food supply has caused a bunch of widespread issues. When my old relatives were growing up, everything came from local farms. Even when I was growing up, our milk, fruit, and eggs came from local farms, we grew veggies, we ate lots of venison. It was only when I moved away when I realized that other people got all their shit shipped in from all over the country and lived on that their whole life.

Honestly I feel like a huge thing to actually fix the problem would be to restructure the supply chain and eating habits around sane shelf lives - eat FRESH food. You want grains with a long shelf life? Buy flour. Groundbreaking, I know.
 
it needs more vegs, especially leafy & green/purple/orange
That's my main problem with this new pyramid. There are more fruits than vegetables, and while most fruit is fine, especially as substitutes for processed sweets, vegetables are much more important.

Go with whole milk. 1% is missing the fat-soluble vitamins and Conjugated Linoleic Acid.
It also has more calories and I'm trying to undo some holiday indulgence damage to my waistline.
Maybe once I sort that out, I'll change, though honestly anything richer than 2% seems a bit much.
Imo, 2% is the best balance. Whole milk is too rich and high-calorie, but 1% tastes watery to me. 2% is satiating and just the right amount of sweetness.

Coffee creamed should be destroyed. If you want to add something sweet that softens the flavour of your coffee you can add milk or cream. Both milk and especially cream are already sweet so there's no need for the extra sugar, plus they're both 100% made of themselves so there's no need for artificial flavouring.
Milk and cream are good for cutting the natural bitterness and acidity of coffee. If the coffee needs anything more than that, it's probably not very good coffee. Though I don't really care for coffee in general, except maybe for some cold brew.
 
Milk and cream are good for cutting the natural bitterness and acidity of coffee. If the coffee needs anything more than that, it's probably not very good coffee. Though I don't really care for coffee in general, except maybe for some cold brew.
I like a pinch of salt in the grounds, but it's perfectly okay to not be a coffee autist.
 
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