ingles dietitianQuestion:ย What do you think of trying to โ€œeat the way myย great-grandmother ateโ€?

Answer:ย I call brief messages about food or nutrition that sound good or look good in print โ€œsoundbite nutritionโ€.
In June of 2006 Michael Pollan wrote an article in Time Magazine, “Six Rules for Eating Wisely” and cautioned, “Donโ€™t eat anything your great-great-great grandmother wouldnโ€™t 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: ….. Donโ€™t eat anything your great-great-grandmother wouldnโ€™t 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, bananasโ€ฆ. 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 youโ€™ll learn that for many citrus fruit was a rare treat and most didnโ€™t 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

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800-334-4936

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