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Opinion: Replacing the food pyramid a good start


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Publisher’s note: This editorial is from the June 7, 2011, Los Angeles Times.

No matter which food group was at the top and which at the bottom, the venerable food pyramid never did make much sense. How big were the servings supposed to be? And what were all those rainbow-colored stripes? The pyramid also lost a lot of respect over the years when the public realized that its recommendations — whether to fill up on meat, dairy or mountains of grains — were based in part on which segments of the agricultural industry wielded the most clout.

The new icon and recommendations released last week by the U.S. Department of Agriculture are a lot healthier and are a more helpful contribution to public well-being. MyPlate is a large circle representing a dinner dish, divided to show that fruits and vegetables should make up half the food consumed, with protein and grains sharing the other half. A small blue circle representing low-fat or nonfat dairy rests to the side. There is no place on this plate for junk food.

The simple “plate” makes it easy for people to see what a meal should look like in terms of nutrition — and there are few plates of food served up in the country right now that resemble it. More common: a hunk of meat as the centerpiece, accompanied by a heaping helping of pasta or bread — usually from refined grains. Vegetables are an afterthought, more a colorful decoration in the corner than a significant part of the meal.

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Comments (2)
  1. Jenny says - Posted: June 10, 2011

    Yes! Well said…especially about subsidies going to the wrong crops!

  2. Garry Bowen says - Posted: June 10, 2011

    Good information on eliminating the political ‘clout’ of designated national food policy suggestions – except for needing much more emphasis on diminishing the “corn lobby” (so much use of high-fructose corn syrup and using ‘food for fuel’) and, by clicking on the “My Plate: The Food Pyramid for Dummies” icon within, read Dr. Andrew Weils’ comments as well.

    Missing is the lapse of the distance between the land and its’ use in the kitchen – produce can lose as much as 50%/day of its’ nutritional value due to its’ trip to the consumer.

    South Lake Tahoe can have much better quality than they get now at much lower prices by pursuing directions of a year-round community garden that is currently “on the table” (pardon the pun) through the City’s Sustainability Action Plan (Item # 9 a Healthy Food System).

    For a modest investment, the citizenry can realize “the energy they’ll need” to reduce obesity, diabetes, have more fit conditions, and increased desire to better their own health through exercise, with its’ own local source of produce, available at any time of year.

    The overall health of families is, at its’ heart, even more important than the current emphasis on overcoming the shortcomings of past indiscretions.