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The Mediterranean Diet Pyramid
![]() Download a high resolution version: For Windows (.zip archive, 690K) or Mac (.sit archive, 690K). Get help with downloads here. This pyramid, representing a healthy, traditional Mediterranean diet, is based on the dietary traditions of Crete, much of the rest of Greece and southern Italy circa 1960, structured in light of current nutrition research. The selection of these regions and this time period as a basis for the design follows from three considerations:
Given these carefully-defined parameters of geography and time, the phrase traditional Mediterranean diet is used here as shorthand for the healthy traditional diets of these regions at that time. The design of the pyramid is not based solely on either the weight or the percentage of energy (calories) that foods account for in the diet, but on a blend of these that is meant to give relative proportions and a general sense of frequency of servings, as well as an indication of which foods to favor in a healthy Mediterranean-style diet. The pyramid describes a diet for most healthy adults. Whether changes would need to be made for children, women in the reproductive years, and other special population groups is an issue that needs further consideration. A principal objective of this graphic illustration is to foster a dialogue within the international scientific, public health, food and agricultural, governmental and other communities as to what specific elements and configuration of the traditional diets of the Mediterranean should be regarded as healthful. For Americans, northern and eastern Europeans and others who want to improve their diets, this model provides a highly palatable, healthful framework for change. Equally positive results can be obtained either by entirely adopting a Mediterranean-style diet, or by alternating meals based on this Mediterranean model with meals inspired by healthful dietary traditions of other cultures in other parts of the world. For those living in the Mediterranean region, this pyramid provides a basis for preserving and revitalizing, within a modern lifestyle, centuries-old traditions that contribute to excellent health and a sense of pleasure and well-being that are a vital part of our collective cultural heritage. This pyramid was the first in a series in development to illustrate geographically the healthy traditional food and dietary patterns of various cultures and regions of the world. This initiative is an outgrowth of a multiyear conference series, "Public Health Implications of Traditional Diets," jointly organized by Harvard School of Public Health, a United Nations World Health Organization/Food and Agriculture Organization (WHO/FAO) Collaborating Center, and Oldways Preservation & Exchange Trust. These pyramids, taken as a collection, offer substantive refinements of the United States Department of Agriculture's Food Guide Pyramid, refinements that reflect the current state of clinical and epidemiological research worldwide and our understanding of what constitutes optimal human nutrition status. Diet Characteristics Dietary data from those parts of the Mediterranean region that in the recent past enjoyed the lowest recorded rates of chronic diseases and the highest adult life expectancy show a pattern like the one illustrated in the list below. The healthfulness of this pattern is corroborated by epidemiological and experimental nutrition research. The average amounts given are in most cases intentionally nonspecific, since variation is known to have been considerable within this pattern. The historical pattern includes the following (with several parenthetical notes adding contemporary public health perspective): 1. An abundance of food from plant sources, including fruits and vegetables, potatoes, breads and grains, beans, nuts, and seeds;K. Dun Gifford Oldways Preservation & Exchange Trust Supporting Documents • Questions and Answers About the Mediterranean Diet Pyramid and its Relationship to the USDA Food Guide Pyramid Contemporary Perspectives on the Traditional Diets of the Mediterranean Region • Foods from Plant Sources at the Center of the Plate • Olive Oil and Total Fat • Low to Moderate Consumption of Dairy Products • Sparing Use of Fish, Poultry, Eggs and Red Meat • Wine in Moderation and with Meals Physical Activity and Other Lifestyle Factors
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"Do not be suprised, my friend, that I long so much for remote lands in which people feel immensely rich with very little; it is true that I live in Rome enjoying a life of fame and prestige, but it is also true that I was born from Celts and Iberians." --Marcus Valerius Martialis, Epigrammata |
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As far as I'm concerned there's no better dish.
Olives rule, no Mediterranean must go through stupid diets with food like that. |
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Awar, take it easy or meds shall ++DESTROY++!!11!!.
Seriously though, the number one thing on the mediterranean diet that keeps mediterraneans fit is, of course: ![]() +++!HOT MED CHICKS!+++ ![]()
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Don't try to steal her Manji, she is not a Swarthy Med, she is a Nordic Viking Norman !
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My business is to succeed, and I am good at it. I create my Iliad by my actions, create it day by day. - Napoleon Bonaparte
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