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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He didn't go far enough. He needs to reverse the last 80 years of "low-fat" bullshit that's helped give everyone diabetes.
My personal 9/11 was witnessing an obese American eating a whole bag of "Peeps" (sugar-coated marshmallows for non burgers) in one sitting. The packaging for the sugar-coated sugar product had a massive "Low Fat" label on the front of the packaging.
 
I started making sourdough from older, lower-gluten grains like Einkorn
Got any good recipes for Einkorn? Started baking with it recently and while i have found something that works well enough at around 60% hydration, i would like to expand/experiment as i get used to sourdough baking. Cheers.
 
Yeah, and most Americans used to break a sweat. Every day. They would walk, play sports, or be doing manual labor. The modern American sits on their ass for 90% of their waking hours.
I swear I can vouch for the lard thing though. I use it in my cooking. I don’t ever use canola oil - it’s butter, lard, and for low heat I will use olive oil. I go for walks but other than that I’m a couch potato but thin. No one in my household that I feed is fat. Low-fat foods and seed oils don’t make you feel satiated because they’re missing nutrients.

Since I haven’t seen it mentioned, I really recommend anyone here look into Dr. Weston Price’s famous research.
Dr. Weston Price and his discoveries
I highly recommend everyone here read through that. You can improve your health drastically by implementing even just some of the dietary suggestions. Especially making your own broth from animal bones. (Particularly important in cold/flu season. I advise people to learn basic herbal medicine, throwing some thyme and ginger in with your chicken broth will help prevent/heal viruses).
 
The problem with milk is the pasteurization process. Ultra pasteurized foods are basically goyslop. Anything ultra pasteurized means the bacteria from it is dead and gone and it's harder to digest. It's nutritional value is completely gone and destroyed. That's why so many people get the runs from drinking milk and dairy products. If they were drinking raw milk and cheeses that weren't put through pasteurization processes or were less pasteurized, they wouldn't have so many issues. The pasteurization is why milk is so bad for adults.

I keep hearing this “lactose intolerance don’t real” argument but, as your local kiwi apparently lacking her trve aryan milkmaid genes, it feels pretty fucking real lol.

Also lactase enzyme works but it seems like not always?
 
Vegans in shambles. It's ridiculous how they don't eat honey. I'm grandpamaxxing here but honey in tea is incredible in the winter.
Honey is underrated. Don't even worry about getting raw vs whatever on the store shelf, just use it!
Honey is sweet, adds moisture to baked goods, and makes a great skin conditioning facial.
Where's the best place to buy real cheese for my cheap lazy ass?
Aldi has some good cheeses, but honestly I just go to the Walmart and buy Cabot instead of Great Value. Totally worth the few extra pennies.
 
The problem with milk is the pasteurization process. Ultra pasteurized foods are basically goyslop. Anything ultra pasteurized means the bacteria from it is dead and gone and it's harder to digest. It's nutritional value is completely gone and destroyed. That's why so many people get the runs from drinking milk and dairy products. If they were drinking raw milk and cheeses that weren't put through pasteurization processes or were less pasteurized, they wouldn't have so many issues. The pasteurization is why milk is so bad for adults.
If you think denaturing proteins reduces their nutritional value you probably shouldn't think too hard about how digestion works
 
NO MORE WOOD PULP IN OUR CHEESE
Unironically, his next step should be absolute war on food fillers, substitutes, diluting starches, additives, etc. Part of the problem with "recommended nutrition" has always been big corporate benefactors making mass produced, highly processed foods that mimic the real stuff. Then they sell this less-nutritious filler as "the government recommended this for a balanced diet".

Every executive who greenlights the use of "modified food starch" in their product should be hanged from the lampposts (using 100% natural hemp rope, sustainably grown).
 
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.
I'm not going to destroy a reward for good eating habits. I changed my diet so that I can better enjoy the treats I do like Ice Cream and by extension sweetened milk. Incidentally, two cups of that coffee creamer into a cup of heavy milk, whisk in six egg yolks combine it all and continuously stir until the custard thickens. Chill and churn for a real simple frozen custard that is "semi-homemade" Anyone remember that show?


The biggest advice I can give anyone on a diet is to come to terms with the fact you are human, you will cheat so account for it and build in reward structures that allow you to not completely abandon what you enjoy but to make the moment you get to enjoy it again even better. Punishing yourself for being a human being is not the way to diet. It's a good way to Die-with a T.
 
Pretty big step in the right direction. I do wish they would stop hating on saturated fats (lard, tallow) vs. polyunsaturated fats (seed oils).

Similarly the they're still talking about low sodium. Salt is not a problem and we would be healthier with more of it. Your kidneys are extremely good at regulating ion balances in your blood as that is one of their primary functions.

If you don't know "the Science" that says salt causes high blood pressure is that they bred rats to have defective kidneys so they couldn't handle excess salt, then turned around and said "yep, salt causes high blood pressure in humans". No, I am not joking.

worldwide consumption of salt is now estimated to be greater than 8 g/day, twice the daily limit recommended by the American Heart Association (810). This relationship between salt intake and elevated blood pressure is complex. In both human and animal models, excess dietary salt, and more specifically excess sodium, inconsistently provokes hypertension (1113). This phenomenon has been coined “salt sensitive” hypertension. To circumvent this experimental challenge, inbred strains of rodents were created to study the effects of excess sodium, such as the Dahl salt-sensitive rat. First accomplished by Lewis K. Dahl in the 1950s, this model was generated by selectively breeding Sprague-Dawley rats that developed hypertension following excess dietary salt (14, 15). Elevation in blood pressure was shown to be mediated by kidney dysfunction (15, 16). Other approaches include the relatively severe mineralocorticoid DOCA-salt hypertension model (17). However, these models have limitations and may lack translatability to high salt-induced hypertension in humans (18).
Also low salt is recommended by the American Heart Association who should all be gassed.

Honey is underrated. [...] makes a great skin conditioning facial.
What?
 
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Pigs in the US are fed dogshit which makes lard taste and smell like dogshit. If pigs were fed apples and corn Lard would taste sweet and have a cidery smell to it enhancing all food.
What's a good alternative to lard when I wanna cook healthy fats? I use avacado oil and tallow atm

@SCV
You can use honey as an occlusive, it keeps moisture in your skin. I don't like it personally, but it's also a Long hair ingredient for snowy moons deep condition hair mask. (aloe, conditioner, honey.)
 
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