Question:ย What do you think of trying to โeat the way myย great-grandmother ateโ?
Answer:ย I call brief messages about food or nutrition that sound good or look good in print โsoundbite nutritionโ.
In June of 2006 Michael Pollan wrote an article in Time Magazine, “Six Rules for Eating Wisely” and cautioned, “Donโt eat anything your great-great-great grandmother wouldnโt recognize as food.” By January 2007 (a mere six month later) in a New York Times Magazine article entitled “Unhappy Meals” (http://michaelpollan.com/articles-archive/unhappy-meals) Pollan had revised that a generation and advised “Eat Food: ….. Donโt eat anything your great-great-grandmother wouldnโt recognize as food.”
By April of 2008 Mr. Pollan gave an interview to NPR (http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=89876927) and had again dropped a generation and was now advising, “… If your great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize it as food, then neither should you” .
Just think about all of the foods that those women never saw that many now eat on a regular basis… edamame, mango, kiwi, papaya, bananasโฆ. Read about my interview with seniors aged 71-95 years old (http://inglesnutrition.blogspot.com/2015/09/many-of-us-have-probably-read.html) and youโll learn that for many citrus fruit was a rare treat and most didnโt have freezers.ย
So before you embrace a simplistic nutrition message stop and think about it for a few minutes!
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Leah McGrath, RDN, LDN
Ingles Markets Corporate Dietitian
facebook.com/LeahMcgrathDietitian
800-334-4936
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