HealthandBeautyDieting
.com/healthy

Diet Healthy Menu Section


   


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it


Main Diet Healthy Menu sponsors


  

NEW!!!!!!
Jobs by Cities

Latest Diet Healthy Menu Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Diet Healthy Menu!



 

Welcome to HealthandBeautyDieting
.com/healthy

   

Diet Healthy Menu Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Long live the Mediterranean Diet!

from: Harvey Dobson

The ancient Mediterranean civilization is rich with stories of grandeur and historic events. It is one of the most distinguished civilizations that have positively influenced other cultures around the world. The geographical location of the Mediterranean allowed its people to influence the other continents. The Mediterranean became a cauldron for cultures from Mesopotamia, India, and China. The history of the Mediterranean region is the history of the interaction of the cultures and people of the lands surrounding the Mediterranean Sea. It was the ancient central superhighway of transport, trade, and cultural exchange between diverse people. Its history is important to understanding the origin and development of the Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Persian, Phoenician, Jewish, Greek, Roman, Arab, and Turkish cultures. In fact, the Mediterranean is crucial to understanding the development of the Western civilization.

However, the Mediterranean not only contributed to humanity in terms of history. The word “Mediterranean” is now closely associated with a popular and effective diet. The Mediterranean diet is a nutritional concept which is founded on the principle that the consumption of olive oil and wine will lower the risk of heart disease and obesity. There are many variations of Mediterranean diet due to social, political and economic differences between Mediterranean countries. However, the Mediterranean diet does share one common characteristic, it is the large consumption of olive oil, which dominates all Mediterranean meals.

In contrast to the standard American diet, the diet of the Mediterranean people includes primarily fresh, seasonal vegetables rather than canned or imported produce. The diet contains low to moderate amounts of dairy products, fish and poultry, very little red meat, eggs, wine, and beer.


The diet contains a fairly high amount of fat, yet the people have less heart disease because they eat healthy fats like olive oil. The fish tend to be oily fish like sardines that are high in Omega-3 oils. The diet eliminates fried foods that have been cooked in rancid vegetable oils or trans fats.

People who tried the classic Mediterranean diet rich in vegetables, fruits, olive oil, cereals and fish are said to live longer and are healthier. But a study in Greece has shown that it is the diet as a whole, rather than any specific individual component, that confers health benefits.

Researchers from the University of Athens and the Harvard School of Public Health recorded the eating habits of 22,000 Greek people, and followed their subsequent health and mortality for an average of 3.7 years. It shows that people who ate a diet rich in typical Mediterranean ingredients were less likely to die, suffer coronary heart disease, or cancer during the follow-up period.

Such results of low incidents of heart disease and death rates in the Mediterranean countries has resulted from other countries to look for help from their Mediterranean neighbors with their diet. However, before anyone should try a Mediterranean diet, more studies are needed to find out whether the diet itself or other lifestyle factors account for the lower deaths and heart diseases.

If these studies prove that the Mediterranean diet is an effective way of reducing heart disease then it will have significant effect for the health community. It also goes to show that the Mediterranean never stopped giving us reasons to rejoice and be in this civilization.





 

Diet Healthy Menu News

Recipes: Add healthy legumes to your diet

Here are some reliable recipes that will help introduce low fat, high fibre legumes into your diet: Spice-roasted Chickpeas, Penne with Lentil Sauce, and Asian Pumpkin and Black Bean Soup.

Read more...


A Heart Healthy Valentine!

Your sweetheart many have the key to your heart, but a proper diet and regular physical activity can be the key to a healthy heart. Instead of the traditional milk chocolate cupids and the candy [...]

Read more...


A ‘donut’ hole in the menu? Woodbury school district's breakfast options upset parent

WOODBURY — With childhood obesity and juvenile diabetes awareness on the rise and Michelle Obama’s healthy-eating initiative, a newly-implemented breakfast program at Evergreen Elementary School has drawn some negative attention from a concerned parent, especially with regard to a weekly breakfast menu item called the “super donut.â€

Read more...


Show your Valentine you care by serving a heart-healthy menu of crimson-colored foods

Why not cook up a big pot of love for your sweetheart this Valentine's Day and serve red for romance instead of the requisite chocolate?

Read more...


Stick to Your Diet

One of the first obstacles I hear from clients trying to stick to their weight loss goals is while dining out on the weekends. Knowing how to navigate a menu can help you from veering off track. The following are some suggestions and common menu items to keep you trucking along toward your goal.

Read more...


Diabetic parent questions Woodbury school's breakfast program

WOODBURY — With childhood obesity and juvenile diabetes awareness on the rise and Michelle Obama’s healthy-eating initiative, a newly-implemented breakfast program at Evergreen Elementary School has drawn some negative attention from a concerned parent, especially with regard to a weekly breakfast menu item called the “super donut.â€

Read more...


Diet Coke® and Minka Kelly Celebrate The Heart Truth® With Lucky Fans

ATLANTA, Feb. 6, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- "Showing a little heart" never goes out of style. That's why actress Minka Kelly and iconic fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg are teaming up with Diet ...

Read more...