What are the hottest diet and food trends for 2019? From the keto diet and non-dairy milk alternatives to dinners cooked campfire style in foil packets, today's guest puts this year's food trends into perspective. Joining me is Dr. Joan Salge Blake, long-time friend, colleague, author of Nutrition & You, and Clinical Associate Professor at Boston University.
Here are the top trends you'll hear about on the show: the keto diet, the push to lower added sugar in everyday food products, non-dairy milk, foods cooked in foil, and plant-based eating.
Show Highlights:
- A new foil-packet dinner recipe for Cod, Carrot, & Green Beans, which can be used with any seafood. It’s seasoned with green onions and teriyaki sauce and topped with a fresh avocado sauce.
- Check out my blog, with a dozen new foil pack dinner recipes.
- What’s coming up on the podcast in 2019? A listener survey to get specific feedback and show ideas and my soon-to-be-announced “March into Good Nutrition” campaign featuring short videos to answer your questions and solve listener cooking and nutrition challenges.
- Joan’s Italian background and how her love of good food led her to become a dietitian and help others to eat better.
- Joan’s work as a professor at Boston University, nutrition textbook author, and her work in media (she’s logged over 1,500 interviews).
- Food trends in 2019:
- The Keto Diet: Very low in carbohydrates, moderate in protein, and very high in fat
- The evidence shows that the Keto Diet is helpful for children with epilepsy, but more research is needed on its role in weight loss
- The Keto Diet is a far cry from the healthiest diet of all. What's the most popular diet style out there? The Mediterranean diet!
- Have you listened to my podcast on the Mediterranean Diet? Check it out!
- The bottom line on the Keto Diet: “Try it if you want to, because it may or may not work for you.”
- Lower sugar content:
- Upcoming new labeling requirements on the Nutrition Facts Panel will begin in January 2020, and the goal is to make it easier to identify sugar content in foods
- Why you can’t just “cut out” all sugar in products and foods
- Liz's recipe for Banana Chocolate Chip Muffins
- Non-dairy milk alternatives, which provide different ways to drink, cook, and bake
- Look out for added sugar in milk alternatives
- Regular milk is packed with protein, potassium, vitamin D, and calcium, and the alternatives don’t always measure up nutritionally
- Foil-pack dinners are easy, no muss, no fuss ways to prepare healthy meals:
- The food inside steams and stays moist
- No mess, no fuss, and no dishes to clean up
- This method reduces food waste by using up leftover vegetables
- Plant-based eating, which is a trend that’s being repeated and finally understood
- Fermented foods, which are being promoted as champions of gut health
- Joan’s podcast, Spot On, launching at the end of January. It focuses on health and wellness for college students and will be full of trendy and useful nutrition information.
- Joan’s family favorite recipe: homemade pizza.
- Joan’s advice: “Make sure you get food and nutrition advice from credible and trained nutritionists and dietitians.”
Resources:
www.superhealthykids.com
www.parentsondemand.com
Find Joan Salge Blake on Instagram and Twitter
Find Joan’s podcast, Spot On, on Facebook
Find Joan’s blog: Nutrition & You