The Miracle

What an early draft tells us about Canada’s new food guide

- By Leslie Young , January 9, 2019

C anada’s new food guide, expected sometime early this year, already looks like it might be a big change from the old “food rainbow” design that hung in classrooms for years. While the new guide has yet to be finalized, some clues about its contents can be found in an October 2018 report prepared by Earnscliff­e Strategy Group in which the firm was asked to present various concepts and illustrati­ons to focus groups to find out what Canadians think.

How to eat

The most novel change is that it looks like the new food guide will also include advice on how to eat — rather than just what to eat. “Healthy eating is more than the foods you eat,” reads a heading in an illustrati­on meant to provide key concepts at a glance. It suggests being “mindful” of your eating habits, cooking more often, sharing meals with others and drinking water. What to eat is “just a piece of the puzzle,” said Kate Comeau, a registered dietitian and spokespers­on for Dietitians of Canada. Cooking at home helps teach kids cooking habits that can extend into adulthood, as well as conferring nutritiona­l benefits, she said. “Generally, when we’re cooking at home, we know that food tends to be more nourishing, lower in processed and prepared foods that are high in sodium, saturated fat and in sugars that tend to have negative effects on our health,” Comeau added.

What to eat

In an illustrati­on showing different kinds of food, the new food guide looks like it might do away with some of the food groups with which most Canadians would be familiar. The old food guide rainbow broke diets into four food groups: vegetables and fruit, grain products, milk and alternativ­es and meat and alternativ­es Under the heading “Eat a variety of healthy foods every day,” a proposed illustrati­on for the new food guide seems to instead emphasize eating lots of whole-grain foods, plenty of vegetables and fruit and protein foods. The old food groups model has been criticized before, as a lot of the calories Canadians eat don’t fall into one of the four current food groups, and some question whether milk and dairy products really deserved their own separate category. Examples under the new “whole-grain” category include wild rice, brown bread, a brown pita and, presumably, whole-wheat pasta. Vegetable and fruit examples include canned and fresh tomatoes, bagged salad, broccoli, melons and berries. Similar illustrati­ons from the old food guide included fruit juice — this one doesn’t. “The Dietitians of Canada say that children do not need juice,” Comeau said, and in her experience, people often grossly overestima­te how much juice constitute­s a serving, which the last food guide said was just half a cup, or 125 mL. Protein foods seem to include tofu, beans, fish, nuts and peanut butter, meat and a carton of milk — the only appearance of a dairy product on this illustrati­on, though Health Canada’s emailed statement also noted that low-fat cheese and yogurt would count as protein foods, too. “[Milk] is still on there as a nutritious food,” Comeau said. “I think we’ll see whether that language of protein foods persists but I think we’re, as dietitians, generally supportive of the idea that all of those foods are nourishing foods.”

How much to eat

It’s only a single illustrati­on, but this picture seems to be missing advice on how many servings of each food you should eat every day. The old guide recommende­d, for example, that adult men eat seven servings of vegetables and fruit, seven servings of grain and three servings each of dairy and meat per day.

What not to eat

The draft illustrati­on of the new food guide also suggests that people limit foods high in sodium, sugars and saturated fat offering the examples of pizza, muffins and a can of soda. Earlier draft “foundation­al statements” also emphasized eating fewer processed foods. The illustrati­on also advises that people read nutrition labels and “be aware of food marketing.” Source: globalnews.ca

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