Why The New MyPlate Recommendations Won’t be on My Plate

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Not on MyPlate
Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Why The New MyPlate Recommendations Won’t be on My Plate

With all the news about the old USDA Food Pyramid being replaced by the new MyPlate (which only cost the government $2 million to create!) I thought that an in-depth look at the old Pyramid is in order. I actually had a post planned about how the Food Pyramid desperately needed to be updated, but the USDA beat me to it.

The Food Pyramid Gave King Tut Heart Disease

You are probably familiar with the old USDA Food Pyramid which recommends 6-11 servings of lectin, gluten and phytic acid packed heart healthy whole grains, followed by fruits and vegetables (always in that order), followed by low-fat dairy and lean meats. Fats, Oils, and Sweets were always to be eaten sparingly.

Besides the fat that I seriously doubt that most people consult the food pyramid before making eating choices… in the 20 years that this one has been in existence, people have, on average been getting sicker and fatter… not healthier.

Was the Pyramid the Problem?

Of course, the USDA maintains that this is simply because the pyramid is complicated and hard for us non-government-official-committees to understand, which is why their new version is an insultingly basic model.

The USDA hasn’t even considered that perhaps the reason people are getting fatter and sicker could be in part due to the upside down pyramid they promote and the “low-fat-heart-healthy-whole-grain” message that is promoted by the mainstream medical and nutrition communities.

In fact, the general reaction to the failure of current medical and nutritional advice seems to be to suggest that we eat less fat and more fiber, as evidenced by the new recommendations.

A Different Problem Entirely?

outdated food labelsThe USDA recommendations for an average person on a 2,000 calorie a day diet is to consume over 300 grams of carbohydrates a day. Consider for one minute the possibility that excess carbohydrates, not excess fat (which the USDA only recommends 65 grams of a day) cause problems like obesity, diabetes and heart disease, and even if Americans are only following half of the advice set forth by the USDA, and its easy to see why these diseases are rampant.

(If you want a great explanation on why carbohydrates/insulin, and not fat, cause obesity, check out the great book Why We Get Fat: And What to Do About It.)

The Lipid Hypothesis is Dead

Despite mounting evidence that the Lipid Hypothesis is dead (the idea that saturated fat and cholesterol cause heart disease) and that high carbohydrate intake is the culprit behind the bevy of modern diseases, the USDA still recommends eating limited fat and simply increasing fruit, vegetable and whole grain consumption to get healthier.

Even in the face of new data and evidence, the case against fat continues. In fact, recent research found that the ancient Egyptians, who ate healthier than we do by our own standards, had a higher rate of heart disease.

Until now, researchers thought that our modern lifestyle with fatty and processed foods caused heart disease, though after this study was released, they admit that they might not understand heart disease as well as they once thought.

Mummies with Heart Disease

The study, which evaluated the calcification in the arteries of Egyptian mummies found high rates of atherosclerosis. Nearly half of all the mummies evaluated had calcified arteries, and some of them were under 40 when they died.

According to the study:

The Egyptians ate more fruit and vegetables and less meat than we do and their meat was leaner. They also led a more active lifestyle and were not thought to have smoked. Given that they developed atherosclerosis anyway, Thomas said, it becomes even more important to take measures to forestall development of the disease as long as possible, including stopping smoking, eating less red meat and losing weight.

The Definition of Insanity

Cognitive dissonance at its finest! To recap- they ate “healthier” by eating more lean meat and more fruits and vegetables (as the USDA recommends) and ate little fat (which the USDA also recommends) and they got sick more often that we do. So the logical conclusion is… drum roll please…. that we need to eat even less fat and even more whole grains, lean meats and fruits and veggies. Logical? I didn’t think so either!

Perhaps if we get rid of meats and saturated animal fats all together and just eat all fruits, vegetables, and healthy whole grains, then we could be healthy! But wait, that doesn’t work either!

Maybe one day, conventional wisdom and the USDA will shift from demonizing fats and reconsider the idea that excess carbohydrates (sugars) and not fats cause heart disease. In the meantime, check out  this article about the harmful effects of sugar and form your own educated opinion.

And have no fear… the USDA is again here to the rescue with a new and improved version of the exact same advice!

Enter MyPlate…

While the outdated “Pyramid” was apparently too confusing for normal people to understand, the new “MyPlate” was designed to be easy to understand, and it is… insultingly easy!

It’s true that a visual representation of a plate may be easier to interpret for many people, but unfortunately, it is only going to help interpret the same bad advice.

The new MyPlate guidelines, pioneered by Michelle Obama, still suggest at least half of dietary intake come from starches and sugars (grains and fruit), less than 1/4 come from protein, and another 1/4 come from vegetables, which could also be starchy.

Dairy, presumably low-fat, is thrown in as an afterthought, that should be consumed as a liquid, preferably preceded by a “skim, 1% or 2%.”

Fat? Hmmm… I guess the $2 million dollar committee-based-effort just forgot to include the recommendation for any fat…

Afraid of the Fat Once Again

Maybe they missed all the recent information about major studies concluding that saturated fat doesn’t cause heart disease, or the meta-analysis showing no link between fat and heart disease,  or all the information presented by Gary Taubes in his (500 page) brilliant case against the lipid hypothesis.

Heck, a $2 million dollar effort can hardly be expected to examine all the information and present an unbiased conclusion, especially when the USDA is so busy subsidizing foods like corn, wheat, and soybeans to the tune of $20 Billion a year!

Now, this wouldn’t be so bad if the USDA were just offering these “guidelines” for free-thinking adults who are capable of buying their own food and making their own nutrition decisions. The problem is, these guidelines also dictate what children are fed at schools. (Though, this might be a good thing in some parents eyes)

This Won’t Fix the Problem

Further restricting fat and calories is not only going to do nothing for the childhood obesity epidemic, it is harmful to developing brains of children. In fact, not getting enough fat, or getting the wrong kind of fat (like vegetable oils promoted by the USDA) has been shown to have a negative impact on IQ later in life.

Yet, this new government-generated graphic is supposed to lead us all on the path to optimal health, even though the food pyramid (which was basically the exact same recommendations) has done the opposite… not that any of us could follow it, because it was so confusing. (eyeroll)

You’ve probably caught on by now that I’m pretty peeved at this latest attempt to intervene in our nation’s health, especially because the advice being promoted is going to damage health, not improve it (though I wouldn’t want government interference even if they were promoting the exact same thing I was).

The Real Problem

I’m annoyed because fat is not the problem, grains and excess sugars and starches are, yet the mainstream medical/nutritional communities continue to promote these ideas as healthy.

If people want to make the choice to live on Pizza, hamburgers and soda, they should absolutely have that choice, in my opinion. It is the fact that many people are being misled into thinking that a “balanced” diet of grains, sugars, and vegetables with a little protein and very little fat is actually the standard they should look to for health.

I’m annoyed that the “experts” are still telling people that it is all about portion control and “calories in, calories out” while these same people, trying to follow that advice, are getting sicker! (Not to mention it is much more about hormones than calories!)

It makes me sick that healthy fats (saturated included!) are still being demonized, and disease causing omega-6 Vegetable oils are still recommended. (Still not sure on the fats issue? Watch this documentary for free now!)

All in the Marketing

bad health advice

What the USDA lacks in ability to read actual studies, they apparently make up for in marketing. I’ve seen versions of this new and “improved” advice everywhere… even in our local hospital’s publication. The article on the right is from the magazine from our local hospital. It is supposedly “Your guide to a balanced meal,” and helps us interpret the new MyPlate recommendations.

I’ve included the text of the article below with my (highly cynical) commentary after.

Chances are your dinner plate is shaped like a circle, not a triangle. So it makes sense to think of your family’s food choices as part of a circle too.

Ok, we can chalk up one true thing from this article. My dinner plate is indeed shaped like a circle. I wonder how many government dollars it took to figure that out. As for the whole food choices being a circle, it reminds me of something I’ve heard before about food choices… oh yeah… “cause it’s the circle, the circle of life” (from the Lion King).

Pyramids vs. Plates, Oh My!

That’s the practical idea behind the government’s new MyPlate icon, which replaces MyPyramid. With MyPlate, what you see in the icon directly relates to what you put on your plate.

Brilliant yet again! That old Food Pyramid (which gave King Tut Heart Disease) certainly was outdated and all of us dumb people lacking in government credentials couldn’t really figure out that you were just telling us to eat lots of carbs, some fruits and veggies and very little meat, fats, oils and sweets. Of course, since your health advice has been such a smashing success over the last few decades, I can see why you’d want to update it!

Veggies and Fruit

An Easier Way To Eat Healthy. MyPlate is a simple visual reminder to build yourself a healthy plate at mealtimes. For busy parents, it’s a quick and easy way to tell at a glance whether children are getting a balanced meal too. Just remember these basic rules of thumb:

-Make Half the plate fruits and vegetables – heavier on the vegetables. Include red, orange and dark green veggies and colorful fruits.

One thing we agree on! Vegetables (and some fruits) are good and you should eat them. Of course, you guys lump potatoes (a tuber and a starch), corn (a grain) and even french fries into this category, but at least we agree on green vegetables. Also, I’d suggest more like half the plate of green, leafy veggies and some fruits on top, but that’s a small point of difference (I say tomato, you say potato, but whatever).

Thank goodness all of us busy parents have you to help us figure out what is healthy for our kids. Without you, we might never figure out that feeding them McDonalds every day or letting them drink soda is not a good idea. What a relief!

Grains and Proteins

-Make the other half grains and protein. Emphasize 100 percent whole grains, like whole grain breads, brown rice and pasta. Select fish and beans for some of your proteins, and when you pick poultry or meat as your protein food, chose lean cuts in small portions.

Great idea (sarcasm). We should certainly eat more grains than protein, since protein is only vital to hundreds of reactions in the body and is needed for cell growth and repair. Grains on the other hand… we need lots of those (sarcasm again!) to be healthy and get our fiber. We definitely shouldn’t worry about the fact that they are not nearly as nutritious as proteins, vegetables or healthy fats. We should ignore the harmful gut-eroding glutens, lectins and phytates which are causing autoimmune disease at record rates. In fact, since a couple pieces of whole wheat toast skyrocket blood sugar just like candy, candy must be good for us too!

As for the 100% whole grain thing! Thank goodness for those wonderful bread plants and pasta stalks. I’m so glad they don’t have to grind the grains up into small particles, which would increase the surface area and make them affect the blood sugar even more!

We should definitely eat beans instead of meat too, because it has some protein (and lot of carbs). When we combine the carbs from the fruit over on the other half of the plate with the hearthealthywholegrains on this side and the carbs from beans, we might just be getting close to the 300+ grams of carbs we are supposed to be eating a day according to you guys, even if we are diabetic.

Anything but Fat!

As for fats… those evil artery-clogging saturated villains… certainly they should be avoided. Never mind that they are needed for minor things like hormone production, satiety, healthy reproductive function and more and that they don’t actually make you fat (or cause heart disease)… avoid at all costs. Eat candy instead.

Pour a glass of fat-free or low-fat milk. You’ll get as much calcium and other important nutrients as from whole milk but with less fat and calories.

Oh yes, do that! Of course, the vitamins in milk like the synthetic Vitamin D in minuscule amounts do need fat to be absorbed, but who cares if you are absorbing them, as long as you are getting them! You can’t have your cake and eat it too (unless of course, you use wheat flour and count it as your heart-healthy-whole-grains).

Evil Calories

And calories, those are the bad guys! It doesn’t matter at all if they come from grains and carbohydrates (which raise the blood sugar, get stored as fat and wreak havoc on the body)  or proteins (which are needed for important functions like cell repair) or fats (which are a much more dense and effective source of fuel). As long as we limit those calories, we are A-OK! In fact, someone once gave me a bottle of fat free, calorie free, salt free salad dressing. I might just drink the stuff!

And dairy, we need lots of that! Of course, all other animals don’t drink milk after infancy, but dairy is such a healthy source of (relatively nothing since they pasteurize and process it all out) everything, we should drink it too… maybe instead of the salad dressing!

Keep Portions Sensible! Think small dinner plate not super-sized platter.

Well shoot… I was soooo looking forward to that gigantic salad I was going to have for dinner. but of course, that would be way more than half the plate of vegetables, so that isn’t good, and the other half would be lots of meat (and not the lean kind) with good ol’ fatty olive oil drizzled on top and nary a grain or dairy in sight. Yep, better not eat that! It won’t be nearly enough nutrients and way too much protein and fat.

Not the Salads!

What should I eat instead? Maybe a couple slices of blood sugar boosting whole wheat toast with some hummus, an apple and a potato… yep that would fit, as long as I wash it down with the fat free dairy…. sounds so much more nutritious to me!

And I should probably keep some of those super-healthy (sarcasm) 100-Calorie packs with me at all times so that I can eat small portions throughout the day because not eating every 2 hours would be like fasting, which would cannibalize my muscle tissue (or not!).

STEP UP TO THE PLATE. MyPlate was developed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Wait a Second…

Wait, what? The U.S. Department of AGRICULTURE is telling us what we should eat? You mean those guys who approved Monsanto’s request to grow genetically modified crops and test them on their own? The same guys who bailed out Domino’s Pizza (lots of saturated fats there) to give the dairy industry a boost? That same organization who’s leader was once a top proponent for Monsanto’s push for genetically modified crops?

Now why would the USDA have any interest in telling us what to eat? They only regulate foods like corn, wheat, soybeans, processed dairy, factory meats…. oh wait! Oh… its all starting o make sense now! (Note to self: consider hiring USDA for brilliant marketing campaign)

It’s designed to translate the government’s 2010 Dietary Health Guidelines for Americans into practical information that you can apply to your meals. Together, these tools help you get the right number of calories for reaching and maintaining a healthy weight. That’s crucial at a time when obesity rates have hit epidemic levels.

Biased a Little?

How wonderful that we have those sweet, unbiased people at the USDA (who regulate all those heart healthy whole grains and low fat dairy) telling us to eat more heart healthy whole grains and low fat dairy. Surely, they are just concerned about the health of consumers and don’t care  one bit about where their funding comes from.

Measures like these will certainly reduce obesity, just as they’ve been doing for the last couple of decades under the government’s guidance (obesity rates have been rising). If only all of us dumb Americans had been smart enough to figure out that that pyramid thing was trying to get us to eat more whole grains these last few decades, we’d all be thin and healthy by now and heart disease and diabetes would be things of the past! (statistics show we actually eat less fat than we did a few decades ago).

(I’m practically choking on sarcasm by now, in case you didn’t notice!)

Food Variety

Many people also don’t eat the variety of foods needed for optimal nutrition and health. Both adults and children often come up short on fiber, potassium, calcium and vitamin D.

MyPlate helps you to remember to choose a varied diet.For gauging portion sizes, the old guidelines talked about servings. The new ones refer to cups for fruit, vegetable and dairy and ounces for grains and proteins – units more familiar to home cooks

Yes, we need more varied whole grains! Of course, vegetables have more fiber and potassium… and foods like sardines and bone broth (lots of fat!) have more calcium… and we could get some Vitamin D from, you know, the sun… but we do certainly have to include those grains and dairy in our variety.

There are hundreds of fruits and vegetables, but we can’t let all that variety cover more than half our plates! where would the beans go? and the lean meats cooked in oxidized vegetable oils? Certainly, we must limit our vegetables to half our plate so we can make room for our whole grains and small portion of lean meat…

What to Do?

The article concludes by giving you resources to read more from the USDA (sorry, not linking to it!) and the hospital’s own website. You could even hire a dietitian to help you eat all that stuff in case you still can’t figure out that you are supposed to eat a lot of heart-healthy whole grains.

I wonder when the USDA and the medical community are going to figure out that these recommendations won’t really help anyone be healthy. Of course, where do people go when they get sick? The hospital!

What a coincidence!

What Is The Solution?

Step One: Stop looking to any branch of the government for nutritional advice (especially one that subsidizes agricultural crops!)

Step Two: Do your own research and take responsibility for your own health! (Don’t take my word for anything… research it yourself!)

Some other bloggers have written excellent takes on this as well (like here and here). Tom Naughton also has a great take on the issue as well, if you are in need of a good laugh!

A Better Way

For my part, I thought that a few changes could help the new MyPlate actually look like something that I would put on my plate. If I had to stick with the same model, it would likely look something like this:

wellness-plate-better-my-plate-recommendationsBut, then again, if I wasn’t limited to a measly $2 million dollar budget because I’d spent all my money subsidizing corn, wheat, and soybeans, I might even design a really flashy plate that would help all of us who were “confused” by the pyramid to really understand what to eat. Though, mine would look like this:

Bottom line… if you want to be healthier, fill YourPlate with foods like meats, eggs, vegetables, avocado, coconuts, some fruits, raw full-fat dairy etc and limit anything canned, bagged, processed or frozen (especially if it contains corn, wheat, or soybeans).

What do you think? Is the new MyPlate a step in the right direction or merely a more insulting way of offering bad dietary advice? What would your plate look like?

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

42 responses to “Why The New MyPlate Recommendations Won’t be on My Plate”

  1. Briana Avatar

    I know this is an old post, but I just came across your blog and I am loving what I see…except for this:”Bottom line… if you want to be healthier, fill YourPlate with foods like meats, eggs, vegetables, avocado, coconuts, some fruits, raw full-fat dairy etc and limit anything canned, bagged, processed or frozen (especially if it contains corn, wheat or soybeans).”

    While I agree that I don’t believe the government should be intervening much when it comes to nutritional values, unfortunately they need to, partly because of government subsized school meal programs and such. So there have to be some sort of guidelines set. I like your plate, until you show the visual of food. I don’t believe that a person should or needs to consume dairy, eggs, or meats to be healthy and maintain a healthy lifestyle. Good fats are good, but I don’t see saturated fat as something that should be promoted. Though it may not directly be the one and only cause of heart disease, it’s a contributing factor.

    The problem with the government’s chart is that it’s just promoting these unregulated labels, such as what cereals put on their boxes “made of 7 whole grains” or “contributes to lowering your cholestoral!” These are unregulated and they can pretty much say whatever they want if they can get at least one scientist to back them up. It’s ridiculous.

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Thanks for reading! We’ll have to disagree on this one! The link between saturated fat and heart disease is spotty at best, and disappears when other variables are taken out (flour, sugar, vegetable oils, etc). When healthy saturated fats are removed, they are often replaced with vegetable based oils (which is funny, because vegetables don’t naturally have oil… https://wellnessmama.com/2193/vegetable-oil/. which has been correlated to higher incidence of cancers and other disease and which causes inflammation, which can lead to heart disease. In my opinion, while it is (theoretically) possible to be mostly healthy without meat, it is very difficult, and not at all a good idea in most cases. Eggs are an excellent source of protein and cholesterol, both which the body needs to create hormones and build cells. Here’s some more specifics on the cholesterol and heart disease issue: https://wellnessmama.com/1853/roots-of-heart-disease/

      1. John Avatar

        “In my opinion, while it is (theoretically) possible to be mostly
        healthy without meat, it is very difficult, and not at all a good idea
        in most cases.”
        Theoretically? Mostly healthy? Difficult? It’s unbelievable how out of touch you are with reality. I’m a vegan and I have no difficulty with getting all the nutrients I need, am very physically fit and healthy, no issues with weight, and I do it without supplements except an occasional B12. I’m also considered a raw vegan and 75%+ of my daily meals are raw. I say + because some days I go up to 100% raw and its fantastic. As well, my health dramatically improved by giving up meat and dairy.
        Donald Watson (the originator of the term Vegan) lived to be 95 and was noted for not needing a doctor until his last days.

        Dr. Ellsworth Wareham is 98 y/o vegan for near 50 years and worked as a surgeon until age 95. Annette Larkins? Mimi Kirk? Colin T. Campbell? Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn and Rip? Even Durian Rider or Freelee?

        Seriously, have you been purposefully avoiding the actual data and anecdotal long living stories? Meat and Dairy promote cancer (IGF-1). Meat is inflammatory, vegetables and fruits are anti-inflammatory. Ppl switching to vegan diets get rid of their cancers and illness or avoid them. How about weight? No problem for vegans. To skinny and weak? Have you seen Mac Danzig? Intelligence? Have you seen the studies on vegan children?

        Stop drinking what was meant for cows, stop the slavery and killing of other beings. Nobody needs eggs at all, ever.

        Please read up on proteins and where they come from. Also read up on the myths of proteins. Ask me where I get my nutrients, proteins, cholesterol from since you clearly know nothing about them and have stated that my lifestyle is difficult and only theoretically can be healthier.
        Sorry if this sounds abrupt but your information shows a lack of understanding nutrition and lifestyles. On top of the ethical and health considerations are the ecological and environmental considerations that you leave out of your article. Over 50% of your plate is ruining our planet. No thanks! Your plate needs work. Peace!

    2. Morneau_for_4 Avatar
      Morneau_for_4

      Congrats, Briana. You’ve bought the Kool-Aid. Your solution is more regulation. Good luck with that.

  2. Erin Avatar

    Thank you for mentioning the issue about the USDA guidelines determining the school meals! I worked at a daycare, and we needed to put two servings of grains on the kids’ plate per meal or risked losing our licencing. In some meals, the bread was the grain, beans served as the protein, and potatoes served as the vegetable! Those were the hardest meals for me to serve… where are the green vegetables, the good fats their little brains need, and the healthy proteins? I realize now that the reason behind this was because the beige foods are the cheapest and are purported to be “healthy” so the daycare can get by, cutting costs and keeping the food technically healthful. Now I’m going into a teacher certification program, and I’m kind of scared to see the lunches served up at the public school; I may have to become an activist on this one! I mean, never before have human children been exposed to such unnatural, unnutritious, food, and what kills me is that their well-meaning parents and governments think they are doing the best thing for them; the adults in the children’s lives lack the correct nutritional information which parents since generations and generations have known (until they were told that butter, animal fats, and meat will kill us all….)

    Sorry, mini-rant! 🙂

  3. Samantha Kyle Avatar
    Samantha Kyle

    So funny! Your plate looks like my plates do, not because I’m trying to be healthy but just because it tastes better! And the bacon plate is how I wish I could eat after a night out of drinks with friends. Lol

  4. Heather Avatar
    Heather

    It’s not just what the kids are fed in school; it’s what it used to determine what snacks the daycares give to their kids, too. My son told me that when he asked for water instead of milk, his daycare provider told him that he would need to bring in a note from the doctor saying he had allergies; otherwise, he would have to drink milk. I told him he had the right to drink whatever he wanted and that though they were probably obligated to offer him milk, he wasn’t obligated to put anything in his mouth he didn’t want to. It’s just a shame that the USDA recommendations are taken as gospel by anyone and everyone in charge of children. Can’t they look around and see how unhealthy these kids are? It boggles my mind.

  5. SteveG Avatar

    Just found your blog through Jen’s Conversion Diary blog, and overall I really like it!

    As I mentioned there, I don’t agree with the counter demonizing of Grains that I see happening on the low carb-side of the isle, but I definitely agree with the statements that we eat too much sugar and grains and that fat is NOT the problem.

    In fact the main reason I posted was to share another bit of information in the debate over low fat.  It’s one of the dirtiest secrets in the food wars, and I’ve rarely seen or heard it talked about, but It’s a pretty well established fact that in addition to what you mention above, low fat diets are strongly linked to depression. 

    Just thought you might like another arrow in the quiver. 🙂

  6. Colleen Avatar
    Colleen

    You are so funny!  Love your “plate.”  I get so tired of the doctors and the government giving us this ridiculous diet advice, despite the studies proving it wrong.  Your response is just what I needed – thanks! 

  7. Pixie Avatar

    I went to my Nutritionist to show her the new direction of eating I want to head in Paleo and she said I wouldn’t get enough nutrition that way because it didn’t include grains. I thought to myself I think I know better how my body reacts then she does but it really discouraged me because she was fine when I tried going vegan and it didn’t work. She also called it extreme. I think it is extremely healthy! 🙂 What does everyone think? I have Celiac Disease and this would save me a lot of time reading labels!!

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Maybe point out to her that meat, vegetables and fats have by far
      more nutrients than grains… Good grief, she supported veganism, but
      now even though you are Celiac, wants you to go through the trouble
      of eating alternative grains…. Good for you for knowing how your
      body reacts!

    2. Emily Avatar

      I’m feeling the same way…I’m (almost) 6 years out from a double lung transplant, and to get me to lose weight my nutritionist is always pushing Weight Watchers, grains, low-fat…but I really think that going this way (ie, Paleo/Primal/WM plan) would be super-beneficial to me. But I’m guessing that my docs/nutritionist would NOT feel the same way. Especially if I mentioned bacon for breakfast, or eggs! My last doctor told me to cut out almost all eggs because of the cholesterol.

    3. kstuff Avatar

      That’s nutso. My sister-in-law is trying to do gluten free, and after reading through this blog, I’m going to join her, only cut out all grains, so I just don’t have to think about that anymore. My nutritionist gave me a diet that is high protein, vegetables and fruit, and after reading through this blog, I’m going to add in there good oils. I rarely take a doctor’s word for it, because they don’t really know how I feel.

  8. Andi Brightwell Avatar
    Andi Brightwell

    Gotta laugh thou at how many other countries copy USA’s dietary guidelines. thou its odd that if you deal with WIC they tell you whole milk till the kiddo turns 2 claiming that its good for brain development and forget most the growth is between birth and 5 not birth and 2.

  9. Karyn Avatar

    This isn’t exactly related to the MyPlate but you always write such nutritional wisdom that I thought I would ask…what is the problem with frozen fruits? I know canned can be a problem because of BHA and being packed in syrups sometimes. And I understand why fresh, in-season local produce is best – but why do I keep seeing admonishments about frozen fruits? Are frozen blueberries thrown into smoothies or something that bad? Oftentimes they look better…

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      From what I understand, chemicals can be added in the packaging of
      frozen fruit… although not an issue if you freeze yourself. In
      general, frozen fruit is one of our moderation items. I think its
      possible to have too much fruit in general, but berries are certainly
      one of the better kinds of fruit, and I agree, often it seems better
      to go with frozen fruit that was frozen while fresh than to buy fresh
      in the winter.

      1. Casandra Avatar

        Thanks, that was my question as well about the frozen fruit, hadn’t heard about chemicals used in the process. I run a home daycare and have used the usda food program, they reimburse me but seems the kids are always running into situations where going by their guidelines is creating imbalances, so seriously considering not using them, but our local government wants you to submit a plan if you do not use the food program, wonder if they’d approve my plan if it’s more like your plate.

  10. Thrand Avatar

    This is Thrand!!!
    Great article you are a true Alewife and speak the truth ,I shall tell many about this site 😛

  11. Chub Avatar

    I saw the bacon plate somewhere else as well and love it as I just polished off two pieces for breakfast, lol.  Great post though love how you always link to what you’re saying so we can all see for ourselves. 

  12. Jan Avatar

    Great minds, and all that – this is pretty close to my post today. 🙂

  13. Ona Avatar

    I think the new “plate” is a great visual… and I just used good ol’ COMMON SENSE to limit the amt of starchy veggies, etc in my diet. *rolls eyes.

  14. Daria Avatar

    Love this post!  I am also frustrated by the conventional wisdom. It is because of this that people look at me like I have two heads when I tell them I don’t eat grains.  Your plate looks much better!  If only the USDA had the balls to recommend that.

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