Mediterranean Diet..Great lifestyle diet
The Mediterranean diet is a heart-healthy eating plan combining elements of Mediterranean-style cooking. Here’s how to adopt the Mediterranean diet.
By Mayo Clinic staff
If you’re looking for a heart-healthy eating plan, the Mediterranean diet might be right for you. The Mediterranean diet incorporates the basics of healthy eating — plus a splash of flavorful olive oil and perhaps a glass of red wine — among other components characterizing the traditional cooking style of countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea.
Most healthy diets include fruits, vegetables, fish and whole grains, and limit unhealthy fats. While these parts of a healthy diet remain tried-and-true, subtle variations or differences in proportions of certain foods may make a difference in your risk of heart disease.
Benefits of the Mediterranean diet
The Mediterranean diet is thought to reduce your risk of heart disease. In fact, a 2007 study conducted in the United States found that both men and women who consumed a Mediterranean diet lowered their risk of death from both heart disease and cancer.
Key components of the Mediterranean diet include:
-Getting plenty of exercise and eating your meals with family and friends
-Eating a generous amount of fruits and vegetables
-Consuming healthy fats such as olive oil and canola oil
-Using herbs and spices instead of salt to flavor foods
-Eating small portions of nuts
-Drinking red wine, in moderation, for some
-Consuming very little red meat
-Eating fish or shellfish at least twice a week
Fruits, vegetables, nuts and grains
The Mediterranean diet traditionally includes fruits, vegetables, pasta and rice. For example, residents of Greece eat very little red meat and average nine servings a day of antioxidant-rich fruits and vegetables. The Mediterranean diet has been associated with a lower level of oxidized low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol — the “bad” cholesterol that’s more likely to build up deposits in your arteries.
Nuts are another part of a healthy Mediterranean diet.
Nuts are high in fat (approximately 80 percent of their calories come from fat), but tree nuts, including walnuts, pecans, almonds and hazel nuts, are low in saturated fat. Nuts are high in calories, so they should not be eaten in large amounts — generally no more than a handful a day. For the best nutrition, avoid honey-roasted or heavily salted nuts.
Grains in the Mediterranean region are typically whole grain and usually contain very few unhealthy trans fats, and bread is an important part of the diet there. However, throughout the Mediterranean region, bread is eaten without butter or margarines, which contain saturated or trans fats.
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Comments
it’s a fantastic diet and i would recommend it to anyone looking for something basic that will help to increase vitality and longevity.
I love fresh veggies, healthy fats, fruits, lean meats, healthy wheat grains, unprocessed food, and 1-3 glasses of WINE a wk..
If you follow this diet and watch your portions… you are good to go!!!!!!!!!