'This Mediterranean
Diet is Oh So Tasty!'
It may comes as a surprise to some but there is more to the Mediterranean
than sun, beach and wine& there is the Mediterranean Diet&
For many years now the inhabitants of countries bordering the Mediterranean
Sea - (such as Southern Spain, Italy, Portugal, Greece, Turkey, Syria,
Libya, Algeria, Morocco, Lebanon and Israel) have been considered to
be among the healthiest in the world enjoying both high life expectancy
plus showing health benefits like low incidence of chronic diseases
and in recent years many studies have been made to discover why and
if it has to do with more than just the sunshine!
Traditionally, their diet has been based on the livestock, fishing and
agriculture of their land and reliance on foods from a rich diversity
of plant sources including fruits,  whole
grains, nuts, beans and seeds. In Northern Africa for example, couscous,
vegetables and legumes form the centre of the diet, in the Eastern Mediterranean,
bulgar and rice along with vegetables and legumes and in Southern Europe,
the basis is formed by rice, polenta, pasta with plenty of vegetables
and legumes and everywhere bread is eaten at most meals (but without butter!).
Nutritional research has shown the advantages of a diet HIGH in vegetables,
fruits, grains, monounsaturated fats and various complex carbohydrates
but LOW in cholesterol and certain forms of saturated fat and led to
greater public awareness.
It is true that these foods, like those foods consumed by the rest
of Europe and the United States are rich in fat, BUT& of a different
type!
Let me explain this: There are three types of dietary fats:
-
Saturated fats, (from animals)
-
Polyunsaturated fats (from plants, seeds, nuts and vegetables)
-
mono saturated fats (olive oil). Olive oil isn't only delicious
(and somewhat expensive) but it's also rich in vitamins A, B1, B2,
C, D, E and K as well as iron.
The
health and therapeutic benefits of olive oil are vast: namely&
· it does not have the same cholesterol raising effects as the
saturated fats found in animal fats
· it contains anti-oxidants that discourage clogging of the arteries
and chronic diseases including cancer
· and it also has lubricating properties in so far as it acts
as a laxative, aids digestion and protects the intestine from ulcers.
Now, this 'Mediterranean diet' - (though not exactly a diet in the
´slimmers´ sense of the word), has led to a style of eating
that is a move away from relying on manufactured food stuffs to recipes
consisting of natural and healthy ingredients eaten raw or minimally
processed.
So what typically comprises 'The Mediterranean Diet?'
When, in 1993, The Harvard University School of Public Health and Oldways
Preservation and Exchange Trust (a Boston based educational organisation)
held a conference on the Mediterranean diet and its influence on public
health, reviewing data concerned with the dietary traditions of those
countries bordering the Mediterranean, the committee developed the 'Mediterranean
Food Guide Pyramid', the main points of which are summarised as follows:
-
plenty of food from plant sources, including fruit, vegetables,
breads and grains, beans, nuts and seeds
-
use of Olive Oil replacing other fats and oils
-
fresh fruit daily
-
Seasonally fresh and locally grown foods in preference to processed
foods
-
Saturated fat should constitute less than 20 per cent of total
calories
-
small amounts of cheese and yoghurt (containing live cultures
which may contribute to good health)
-
daily moderate amounts of fish and poultry weekly and only a few
eggs
-
very little red meat
-
a glass of wine (especially red) with meals as it contains anti-oxidants
and has cholesterol reducing properties (although optional as there
are contraindications for women related to breast cancer)
Natalia Kim is a journalist for www.beginning-exercise-and-weight-loss-help.com

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