Alternative medicine
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours agoThe truth about cooking oils: 14 essential facts for healthier, cheaper meals
Understanding the health implications of various cooking oils is essential for making informed dietary choices.
The USDA provides regularly-updated estimates of what an individual's monthly food budget should be, with 'thrifty,' low-, moderate-, and high-cost levels divided by genders and ages.
In 2010, chicken finally overtook beef as the most consumed meat in the country. More recently, we've become a nation of chicken thighs, which are easy to cook, flavorful, and affordable.
Flavor starts with what goes into the pan first, and you can do it without leaning on heavy sauces or fried shortcuts. Olive oil, garlic, onions, citrus, herbs, ginger, and spices add depth quickly and pair well with vegetables, beans, fish, and grains that often feature in anti-inflammatory eating patterns.
To fuel our bodies, we must eat other living things, killing them in the process. However, most plants and algae are autotrophs. They bootstrap their biomass without the barbarism of eating others: using photosynthesis, turning sunlight, water, and carbon into energy.
Flytrex has partnered with Little Caesars to revolutionize pizza delivery, utilizing Sky2 drone technology to deliver family-sized pizza orders within minutes, enhancing customer experience and efficiency.
"I think there's a lot of comfort that comes from prescriptive approaches like aiming for two cups of beans a day - besides, it's so specific. However, the body will benefit from any increase in bean intake simply because they contain compounds that aid in heart health and digestion."
Research increasingly demonstrates that healthy nutrition improves mental health, and an entirely new subspecialty has formed to support this. Nutritional psychiatry is expanding rapidly, with research growing 15-fold from 2000 to 2024, reflecting the increasing acceptance of diet's role in mental health.
These tiny packages pack a nutritional punch-so much so that the advisory committee for the 2025 U.S. Dietary Guidelines recommended upping the daily serving size of legumes and promoting them as a protein source over meat and seafood. Navy beans, for example, are especially fiber-dense, and lentils are protein powerhouses.
The Dietary Guidelines for Americans aim to translate the most up-to-date nutrition science into practical advice for the public as well as to guide federal policy for programs such as school lunches. But the newest version of the guidelines, released on Jan. 7, 2026, seems to be spurring more confusion than clarity about what people should be eating. The latest dietary guidelines, published on Jan. 7, 2026, have received mixed reviews from nutrition experts.
Diet culture norms have led to a multibillion-dollar industry promoting diets that each come with their own set of rules, with each claiming it's the only way to be healthy or lose weight. When access to nutrition information is at an all-time high online, people are often left digging through conflicting information when trying to figure out what to eat or what a healthy diet look likes.
From ultra-processed foods to hidden chemicals, we ask whether what's on our plates is making us ill. From ultra-processed foods to chemicals linked to cancer and chronic disease, this episode unpacks what's really inside everyday supermarket products. We examine how mass production and convenience culture reshaped our diets, why some ingredients are banned in parts of the world but legal elsewhere, and what FDA-approved actually means.
I grew up in a Mexican household where food was our love language - but there was also stigma and very little guidance around diabetes. When my aunt, and later my mom, were diagnosed, it took time to understand what healthy eating could look like for them. That's why this partnership means so much to me. Our culture and our food are not the problem - they're part of the solution.