The 2010 Dietary Guidelines: What’s ahead from the government?

You may not turn to the government as your best source for nutrition advice, but the upcoming Dietary Guidelines for Americans 2010 will influence what you eat in one way or another. These are the “official” recommendations, and they’re updated every five years. They shape everything from food labeling to public food programs, including school lunches.

The USDA and Department of Health and Human Services, which issue the guidelines jointly, appointed an advisory committee of top researchers in fields of nutrition, medicine, and food safety and technology to evaluate the latest scientific evidence and submit their recommendations in June. Now the USDA and HHS are considering the committee’s proposals, along with public comments (from public-health advocates to food-commodity special interests), and will release the final guidelines later this year.

As with past Dietary Guidelines, this report’s recommendations are aimed at turning our nation’s tide of obesity. Too many Americans are overweight or obese yet “undernourished in several key nutrients,” the committee notes.

What struck me, as I culled through the 700-page report, was how familiar their suggestions are, in that many of their recommendations reflect NOURISH Evolution’s four pillars.

Sound Nutrition: A plant-based diet

Since they were first published in 1980, every version of the dietary guidelines has advised Americans to eat more fruits and vegetables. But the latest recommendations take it a step further, advocating a “total-diet approach” emphasizing plant foods: “Shift food intake patterns to a more plant-based diet that emphasizes vegetables, cooked dry beans and peas, fruits, whole grains, nuts and seeds.”

They also call for us to eat more seafood and fat-free and low-fat milk and milk products, while consuming lean meats, poultry and eggs in moderation.

It’ll be interesting to see how that recommendation is interpreted in the final 2010 guidelines released later this year. Lobbies, like the National Cattleman’s Beef Association and the National Chicken Council, exert tremendous influence on the USDA and may take a dim view of a government guideline for a plant-based diet.

Eco-Bites: Choose environmentally sustainable food

The committee also calls for increased “environmentally sustainable production of vegetables, fruits, and fiber-rich whole grains.”

However, it stops short of recommending organic agriculture as that sustainable solution, saying that the evidence is too limited to declare organically cultivated produce and grains nutritionally superior to conventional. They also conclude that conventional fare is safe, since it meets the Environmental Protection Agency’s standards. (On an encouraging note, however, the USDA appears to be boosting its support of organic and local farming.)

The report also recommends increasing sustainable aquaculture in order to meet the recommendation to eat two (4-ounce) servings of seafood per week. But it doesn’t delve into what constitutes responsible aquaculture, either from a health or environmental perspective. The genetically engineered salmon which is under consideration for approval by the FDA next week will prove an interesting in-the-trenches benchmark on how they’re really defining “sustainable” aquaculture.

While we’d like to see the recommended guidelines call for organic agriculture and responsible aquaculture in more specific terms, the fact that they even touch on these topics is remarkable.

Mindful Meals: Eat attentively

The committee acknowledges that there’s a huge disconnect between what experts, including the government, advise people to eat and what they really eat. “Americans must become mindful, or ‘conscious,’ eaters, that is, attentively choosing what and how much they eat,” the report notes.

We couldn’t agree more–if you don’t pay attention to what you eat, all the great nutrition advice in the world means nothing. But we’re curious how this will play out in the final guidelines, since mindful eating is an intangible, though crucial, part of the equation and the Dietary Guidelines tend to favor concrete advice.

Kitchen Tips: Learn to cook

It’s no surprise that the report scolds Americans for eating too much food away from home, noting that portion sizes have ballooned over the years as we eat out more often. Meals away from home are a big reason why an astonishing 35% of the American diet is now made up of solid (saturated) fats and added sugars–aka “SoFAS” in the report.

To remedy that, the proposed recommendations urge Americans to return to the kitchen to “improve nutrition literacy and cooking skills, including safe food handling skills, and empower and motivate the population, especially families with children, to prepare and consume healthy foods at home.”

They also call for nutrition, cooking and food safety to be incorporated into school curricula from preschool on.

We’re intrigued to see how this recommendation is interpreted in the final guidelines. Will they recommend a certain number of meals per week prepared from scratch at home? How do mindful eating and home cooking fit onto a pyramid? Or will they dispense with the Food Guide Pyramid–which was first introduced in 1995 and evolved into the confusing color-coded, personalized MyPyramid in 2005–in favor of a simpler, whole-food diet?

If they do latter, it will indeed look familiar … it would look a lot like the NOURISH Evolution approach.

3 Ways to Make Fresh Fast During the Back-to-School Rush

The reason we reach for convenience foods is because they’re, well, convenient. And they’re especially appealing during the back-to-school frenzy. But taking 20 minutes to do these three things at the beginning of the week (then storing them in the fridge until used) will set you up so that a fresh, healthy meal is the fastest choice of all.

fast-healthy-back-to-school-meals

A little do-ahead goes a long way in helping you eat healthier throughout the week.

Plum Parfaits with Bulgur and Vanilla Yogurt

Pick a few extra plums for this ultra-simple, healthy dessert. It’s got both grown-up aesthetic appeal and a healthful hit of whole grain, thanks to the bulgur.

plum-parfait-bulgur-yogurt-recipe

1/2 cup water
1/2 cup bulgur, fine or medium
2 cups plums, pitted, halved and thinly sliced crosswise
2 tablespoons sugar
1/4 cup orange juice
1/2 teaspoon cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
2 cups low-fat vanilla yogurt
1/3 cup sliced almonds, toasted

Bring water to a boil in a medium saucepan. Stir in bulgur, turn off heat, cover and let stand for 10 minutes. Fluff with a fork.

Stir together plums, sugar, orange juice and cornstarch in a small saucepan and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Simmer for 4-5 minutes, until thickened slightly. Stir in almond extract.

In each of 4 small, tall glasses, layer a third of the yogurt, plums and almonds. Add a layer of half the bulgur, then repeat with half the remaining yogurt, plums and almonds. Finish with a final layer of bulgur, yogurt, plums and almonds.

Serves 4

Lose Weight, Feel Great–Join My Nourish Mentor!

I can’t tell you how much fun it is to hear the a-ha’s and awesome success stories from My Nourish Mentor members (My Nourish Mentor is the companion small group coaching program to NOURISH Evolution). Here’s one account of how My Nourish Mentor prompted an eye-opening, life-changing journey. And from another, the news that 12 pounds have dropped off without her ever feeling deprived or like she was on a diet. “I can’t imagine ever going back to how I ate before,” she said. “Quite frankly, I wouldn’t want to.”

To see a video introduction to the program, take a tour, get more information or sign up, visit the My Nourish Mentor website.

We’ve got another group starting up in just a few weeks, so sign up now to get your spot! If … you truly want to change your relationship with food–for good.

Thursday Giveaway: The Earthbound Cook

Win a free copy of the new Earthbound Cook!

We love Earthbound Farm. Lia had the pleasure of working closely with owners Drew and Myra Goodman on the last cookbook and found out first-hand that they truly walk the talk. And man their talk is delicious. In this follow-up to Food to Live By, you’ll find 250 more recipes that are good for body and planet (and we love that here at NOURISH Evolution!)–like Truffled Kale Casserole and Coconut-Crusted Salmon–along with advice on things like making smart meat choices and six reasons to protect our oceans.

But, friends, you have to play to win this totally awesome book.

So here’s the deal. Leave a comment here to be entered to win (important: be sure you’re signed in to NOURISH Evolution so we can find you … or sign up, if you haven’t alreadyonly NOURISH Evolution members are eligible to win).

Lia will announce the winner in next Friday’s Friday Digest!

Good luck!

NOURISH Evolution Serves Up a Taste of Sonoma

Serving food to 2,500 hungry people is lots of fun–especially if you do it on a perfect September Saturday in the heart of Northern California’s Wine Country. That’s what we did at last weekend’s Taste of Sonoma at the historic MacMurray Ranch in Healdsburg. The sell-out crowd came to spend the day sipping Sonoma County’s best wines, watching chef demonstrations and sampling tasty treats.

Healdsburg is Lia’s home turf, so of course NOURISH Evolution Partnership Director Mary Beth Burner and I gussied up to join the fun (that’s us with Lia in the lower right-hand photo).

We spent two days cooking up Corn & Quinoa Pasta Salad, Asian Pesto and Hot-Smoked Sablefish (the recipe is below). People relished tasting new-to-them foods, such as quinoa and Jovial einkorn whole grain pasta (it’s rolling out at Whole Foods nationwide in coming months) or the zippy pesto with Asian flare.

“I love this sablefish!” said one new fan. “I’m sick of salmon, it’s nice to have something new.”

“This is food I live for,” raved another.

Hungry festival-goers gobbled it up, and lots of peeps came back for seconds–with friends in tow. Many lined up to watch Lia demo the pasta salad, pesto and our Sauteed Sablefish Ginger-Soy Glaze. She also demonstrated a cumin-crusted grilled scallop recipe at the Alaska Seafood station.

The most fun for us was meeting NOURISH Evolution fans in person and making lots of new friends. If we didn’t see you there, you can enjoy your own Taste of Sonoma with the recipes on our site (they’re exactly what we served on Saturday). And we hope to see you at next year’s event. It’s a delightful way to spend your Labor Day weekend!

Vegan Tempeh Fajitas

Tempeh is a firm, chewy cake made from fermented soybeans, and its dense texture makes it a hearty yet cholesterol-free and very low-fat stand-in for meat. It’s a staple of vegan cuisine. You can crumble into chili, or slice it and throw it on the grill. Here, we use it as a substitute for beef in fajitas. Tempeh does well marinated (it really soaks up the flavors). For this weeknight-friendly recipe, combine the tempeh with the marinade in the morning, pop it in the fridge, and then finish the recipe in the evening. We use plain old soy tempeh, but you can use other varieties, such as flax or three-grain. Serve with salsa (either End-of-Summer Pico de Gallo or Fiery-Sweet Peach Salsa) and a dollop of Guatemalan Guacamole.

[amd-zlrecipe-recipe:126]

End-of-Summer Pico de Gallo

This simple pico de gallo salsa recipe is a tasty way to use up late-season tomatoes, and you can pull it together in no time. Pico de gallo — also known as salsa fresca — is traditional uncooked Mexican salsa. Serve it with our Vegan Tempeh Fajitas, as a condiment with grilled chicken or fish, or simply with chips and a nice, cold beer.

[amd-zlrecipe-recipe:86]

Nourishing Hero: Kelly Masini’s School Garden Inspires a Community

This is the second installment in our Nourishing Heroes series, in which we feature the individuals and organizations who inspire us with food that nourishes body, soul and planet. Do you know a Nourishing Hero we should feature on NOURISH Evolution? Let us know who inspires you!

Students, parents and teachers are returning to school, where they’ll reunite with friends, catch up with colleagues and notice small tweaks like a fresh coat of paint or a new tetherball pole.

At Noddin Elementary School in San Jose, Calif., they’ll notice something else: raised garden beds heavy with ripe zucchini, tomatoes, Swiss chard and eggplant, which they helped plant three months ago.  Over the summer, the planters have yielded an astonishing 785 pounds (and counting) of produce for the local Second Harvest Food Bank.

Kelly Masini, a San Jose mother of two, spearheaded the wildly successful initiative and galvanized the entire school community to take part. I’ve worked with Kelly for several years on our district’s Wellness Committee. She’s engaged and clear-spoken, but not a bulldog. Given the glacial pace with which schools sometimes effect change–due to bureaucratic wrangling, politics or struggling finances–a project like this could have easily fallen off the rails. Kelly kept it on track.

“My mom always had some type of vegetable in the ground during the summers,” Kelly recalls. She planted her first vegetable garden in her mid-20s and after giving birth to her older son Alex, now 9, she joined the Master Gardener program through the University of California Extension.

Fast forward several years to last spring, when Kelly and fellow parent volunteers Tamiko House and Jennie Reynolds discussed adding new planting boxes to the five already present on school grounds. House and Reynolds obtained grant funding from the City of San Jose, and soon 10 boxes were in place, along with a simple irrigation system.

At this point, Kelly realized leaving 10 beds dormant during the year’s most productive season–summer–made little sense, and so she proposed an idea.

“As a Master Gardener,” she says, “I’d become familiar with Plant a Row for the Hungry.” The program encourages home gardeners to plant an extra row of seeds and donate the resulting harvest to the needy. Kelly expanded this concept by getting students, teachers and parents to plant all 10 beds on a single afternoon, planning to donate the entire summer harvest to the food bank.

After facing a few bureaucratic hurdles from the school district, she was finally green-lighted thanks, in part, to support from a green-thumbed school board advocate.  She verified that the food bank could accept the produce, and then headed out to procure plants.  Ace Hardware and SummerWinds Nursery, two local gardening centers, donated over 300 plants. (Most were past-prime “seconds,” which she nurtured back to health before planting.)

On a glorious May afternoon, kindergartners through fifth graders put those plants in the ground, and each Friday throughout the summer a small cadre of dedicated parent volunteers and children weeded, tended, harvested and drove the vegetables to the food bank. The list of donated vegetables is impressive: zucchini, crookneck squash, Japanese eggplant, cayenne peppers, bell peppers, jalapenos, three kinds of beans, several varieties of tomatoes, two types of radishes, Swiss chard and carrots.

“Kelly stepped in at just the right time with a viable community solution to end hunger,” says Poppy Pembroke, the food bank’s communications manager. “Not only is Kelly’s impact visible in the poundage that Noddin produces, but her role as a community leader is inspiring countless others to step up and share their harvests with our neighbors in need.”

Indeed, Kelly reports that one of her summer high-school volunteers at Noddin wants to launch a similar program at his school.

With the start of the school year, the newly planted winter crops–pumpkins, spaghetti and winter squash–will most likely be slated for classroom use, says Kelly. “I’m planning to do summer crops [for the food bank] next year, though.

“This could have been an epic fail,” she reflects, “but I just went for it. It just seemed like the right thing to do.”

The lucky recipients of Noddin’s summer bounty would likely agree.

Cheryl Sternman Rule is a food and nutrition writer whose work has appeared in numerous national magazines, including EatingWell and Body+Soul. She is the voice behind the food blog 5 Second Rule.