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The planetary health diet

Started by José Roca, January 17, 2019, 12:27:24 PM

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José Roca

Who came up with this?

A group of 37 scientists from around the world were brought together as part of the EAT-Lancet commission.

They're a mix of experts from farming to climate change to nutrition. They took two years to come up with their findings which have been published in the Lancet.

https://www.bbc.com/news/health-46865204

The funny part is that it is very close to the diet that I have followed during all my life (when I was a child, the Mediterranean diet was the only one where I live). They could have saved a lot of work and money if they had asked me first :)

José Roca

Who wants a burger when you can have this:



Paul Squires

Sadly, it will probably be another generation or two before people wake up to the killer health effects of a normal Western diet. José, you're lucky to have grown up in an area of the world where people view food and diet in a much more progressive light than over here in North America. For the most part, the diet here is HUGE portions of crap food. Food that is cheap for the consumer and heavily subsidized by government. Milk, dairy, pork, beef.... fast food everywhere. When people talk about health food they're viewed mostly as crazy vegans. I practice intermittent fasting and just stopping putting food in my mouth for 16 hours at a time has made me feel better, faster, stronger... and less lazy.
Paul Squires
PlanetSquires Software
WinFBE Editor and Visual Designer

Petrus Vorster

#3
I assume neither of you two look like i do.....
Lots of beef down here. Fast food joints from here now all over the planet.
Steers, Nando's, etc, etc. They are everywhere....
Especially in my shirt and pant sizes.
I take my hat off to someone who can fast 16 hours....
-Regards
Peter

SeaVipe

Clive Richey

José Roca

I never buy processed food. Even a jar of tomato sauce contains a lot of sugar, salt and preservatives. I buy fresh food and cook it myself.

Now is the season for Navel oranges where I live. I buy them to a farmer of my town for half an euro a Kg. I add to them a little of raw orange blossom honey and some nuts. Cheap, healthy and delicious.



Joerg B.

#6
@Josè
Very tasty.

A big problem of our time is that many young people no longer learn how to cook properly.
I often observe that young people without work resort to ready meals, although they don't have the money for this but they have the time to cook.
Cooking yourself is not more expensive, but warming up finished food is more convenient.

I agree with you 100% that the finished products contain far too much sugar and salt.It is well known that these products are too expensive, make us obese and cause heart and circulatory problems.

And yet there are fewer and fewer people who eat like you.
I am glad that my wife can cook and almost exclusively buys fresh seasonal products.And I am glad that my wife taught all our children how to cook.
Can you blame the young people if their parents haven't learned it yet?
Certainly not an accusation, but it is not an excuse either. Anyone can learn it.

Even I.....
Greeting from Germany

Joerg

Petrus Vorster

Josè, you probably do triathlon too?

Man, you are a super programmer, you live healthy and you are probably rich too?
The only stuff they grow here are Corn, Peanuts, Pecan, Sunflowers and cotton.
O and cattle, loads of cattle everywhere.
Not a single Orange or fruit tree in 300km. To dry and immensely hot.
KFC just a small distance....Steers..just a mile.....etc, etc,
Supermarket veggies and cans of processed foods then...

There is a saying here "Never trust a skinny chef", but it seems you have it worked out pretty well.
And Spain is famous for its oranges...
My previous branch was far from here and at least we had bucketloads of cherries & asparagus, but that was about it.

Nowadays all the farms had been commercialized and they pack and store onsite to ship out.
Nobody here sells directly to the public anymore.

Seems you have it good there.
-Regards
Peter

José Roca

As a Spanish philosopher said, "I am myself and my circumstance". I was born in the Horta of Valencia, an ideal place to grown vegetables, oranges and rice, but not cattle. Therefore, we did eat a lot of vegetables, fruits, rice, legumes and fish, and little meat (mainly chicken, rabbit, pork and lamb). Rice is our speciality: not only the world famous paella valenciana, but we have more than 300 different recipes. Like rice has no flavor of its own and it absorbs the flavor of the added condiments, it never tires you (as long as you don't eat paella everyday...). If I had been born in a different place, no doubt that my diet would be different. I have been lucky that what we had to eat was tasty and healthy.

Now it is very different. The young generations have become adept to junk food and obesity has become a big problem. It is very sad to see this happening in a country famous by its cuisine. We also used to walk a lot; now we are seeing and increasing number of young boys using kick scooters.

The consequences of junk food are known: obesity, diabetes, cholesterol, etc. You live less and in worse condition. But I not only follow and healthy diet because it is better for my health, but also because I like it more. Instead of a burger and a soft drink, it is much better a portion of Spanish omelette with a glass of wine, or any other of our famous "tapas".




raymw

In the same way that facebook, twitter, google etc have teams of folk designed to hook you in and keep you addicted, the fast food companies have teams of people knowing the exact amount of fat and sugars to get you addicted to their products. Unfortunately many folk have an 'addictive gene', and it is very hard work for them to resist. Folk I know have had there stomach stapled, most of their gut removed, but still try and eat the manufactured rubbish. Of course, difficult for some to resist the advertising, red bull being a prime example. It was banned in many countries due to its harmfulness, but money changes hands at high levels, and now it is accepted, more or less world wide. afaik, coca cola don't sell much in Scotland, and I'm not sure if starbucks are in Italy yet.

For folk in an urban environment, ones used to 'sell by dates instead of using their nose, getting good fresh food would be a logistics nightmare. Over here, in UK, very difficult to get anything fresh in the supermarkets - tomatoes are wood chips and water, apples are a year old (kept in a cool gassed environment in large warehouses), lots of 'buy now, rot at home', mixed leaves in a bag filled with a gas to keep 'em fresh, and they wilt within half hour of bag being opened - but it's cheap compared to more artisan suppliers. Their used to be a season for apples and pears, beans, potatoes, etc. Now stuff shipped world wide, parts of the world being deforested to produce the latest fad of beans, coffee, whatever.

But few care. apparently many young families do not have a dining room table in their homes.

I suppose, as I grew up with the remnants of food rationing, in UK, after ww2, My taste is not the same as most younger folk.

Theo Gottwald

Read this and understand taht a "Human made CLimate Change" is just a new Pseudo religion.

Man Made Climate Change Religion


José Roca

This thread was about eating healthy, not about climate change, so please don't act like a troll.

Theo Gottwald

If you want do something to additionally improve your halth, Jose look for alkaline water.
I have much better knowledge in healthy diet then in programming :-) so you can ask me if you want to progress on that.

raymw

Hi Theo,
Perhaps you can explain the coloured chart you've posted. What do the numbers signify? Why is it that fruit juices have the group number 6, whereas lemons have the group number 10. I've always thought that most fruits are acidic e.g. lemons, limes, apples.
Ray

Andrew Lindsay