New Food
Guide Pyramid
You’ve
heard about it when you were in school, but you really didn’t
pay too much attention to it. There’s been some talk about it
recently but again you just didn’t have the time to give your
full attention to it. Now however, you have enough time on your hands,
and besides your kids need help with their schoolwork so
you’ll need to learn all about it. What am I talking about?
The Food Guide Pyramid of course.
Sometime late in
the early mists of science some genius or early nutritionist stumbled
across the magical fact that humans needed food to live. This same
person also deduced quite rightly that some foods were more important
than others.
And taking things
one step further, this genius saw that even from amongst these
categories the foods would again be divided into sections where some of
these foods should only be taken in smaller quantities.
At a guess this
person probably came up with a complex table or matrix from which to
describe the proper daily intake of food for a person in the course of
one day. But as will happen, through some method we have instead ended
up not with a table or matrix but with the Food Guide Pyramid that
graces all doctors’ offices these days.
Well, now you know
what the food guide pyramid is, but do you know exactly what it does,
and how it works? In the earlier days as little back as five years ago,
the food guide pyramid was set in an orderly manner, with the foods
that should be consumed most placed on the bottom, and the foods that
should be eaten the least placed on the tip of the food guide pyramid.
As of 2005 however,
the food guide pyramid as we know it was changed forever, and a new one
was built to take its place. Essentially this new food guide pyramid
tells you the same story, but it now has added components to be able to
help you better understand diet and your health.
This new food guide
pyramid actually has a person climbing stairs up the side of the
pyramid to show that regular exercise also needs to be included in your
overall
healthy eating habits. And
instead of the horizontal lines that we are so used to seeing, the
divisions now radiate down from the tip of the food guide pyramid. What
this tells us is that although some food groups are better for us than
others, some foods even within a group should only be taken in
moderation.
You’ll
also notice that this new food guide pyramid sports a dazzling array of
rainbow colors as its divisional stripes, and that’s just to
make the sections easier to differentiate. With six colored divisions
you’ll go through Orange (Grains), Green (Vegetables), Red
(Fruits), Yellow (Fats), Blue (Dairy), and Purple (Meats, Beans, Fish).
Take a walk through this new food guide pyramid – you might
be pleasantly surprised what you find inside.