Dietary Guidelines and Food Guides.: USDA Food Guide My Pyramid Food Labels Nutrients Guidelines For Filipinos
Dietary Guidelines and Food Guides.: USDA Food Guide My Pyramid Food Labels Nutrients Guidelines For Filipinos
FOOD GUIDES.
• USDA Food Guide
• MY PYRAMID
• Food Labels
• Nutrients Guidelines for Filipinos
USDA FOOD GUIDE
The Food Guide Pyramid was a recognizable nutrition
tool that was introduced by the USDA in 1992. It was
shaped like a pyramid to suggest that a person should eat
more foods from the bottom of the pyramid and
fewer foods and beverages from the top of the pyramid.
As the MyPlate icon shows, the five food
groups are Fruits, Vegetables, Grains,
Protein Foods, and Dairy. The 2015-2020
Dietary Guidelines for
Americans emphasizes the importance of an
overall healthy eating pattern with all five
groups as key building blocks, plus oils.
(While oils are not a food group, they are
emphasized as part of a healthy eating
pattern because they are a major source of
essential fatty acids and vitamin E). Each
food group includes a variety of foods that
are similar in nutritional makeup, and each
group plays an important role in an overall
healthy eating pattern. Some of the food
groups are broken down further into
subgroups to emphasize foods that are
particularly good sources of certain
vitamins and minerals. For example, the
subgroups within the Grains Group
encourage whole grains, which provide
more fiber, magnesium, and zinc than
refined grains.
Purpose of Food Groups- As nutrition science has progressed
over time, scientists have discovered vitamins, minerals, and
other components that make up our foods, and surely, there are
more yet to be discovered. Food groups simplify dietary
recommendations by focusing on foods instead of nutrients.
Food Group Amounts- The USDA Food Patterns specify targets
for each food group in cup equivalents (for Fruits, Vegetables,
and Dairy) and ounce equivalents (for Grains and Protein
Foods). Each pattern also includes a limited number of calories
(8-19%) that can be used in other ways, such as small amounts
of added sugars and saturated fats. Americans are encouraged to
choose foods in their most nutrient dense forms as often as
possible, to keep added sugars and saturated fat intakes each
below 10 percent of total calorie intake.
MYPYRAMID
Fluid: 6 - 8 glasses
Grains: 4 - 6 bowls
Fluid: 6 - 8 glasses
Healthy Eating Food Pyramid for Adults
Grains: 3 - 8 bowls
Vegetables: at least 3 servings
Fruits: at least 2 servings
Meat, fish, egg and alternatives: 5 - 8 taels
Milk and alternatives: 1 - 2 servings
Fat/oil, salt and sugar: eat the least
Fluid: 6 - 8 glasses
Healthy Eating Food Pyramid for Elderly
Grains: 3 - 5 bowls
Vegetables: at least 3 servings
Fruits: at least 2 servings
Meat, fish, egg and alternatives: 5 - 6 taels
Milk and alternatives: 1 - 2 servings
Fat/oil, salt and sugar: eat the least
Fluid: 6 - 8 glasses
Remarks
1 tael is equivalent to about 40 grams (raw meat).
The above recommendations are intended for healthy individuals only. Those with chronic diseases and
specific nutritional needs should consult their family doctors and dietitians for individualised dietary
recommendations.
Food Exchange List:
1 bowl of grains is equivalent to:
Cooked rice, 1 bowl
Cooked noodles, 11⁄4 bowls
Bread, 2 slices
1 serving of vegetables is equivalent to:
Cooked vegetables, 1⁄2 bowl
Raw vegetables, 1 bowl
1 serving of fruit is equivalent to:
Medium-sized apple, 1 piece
Kiwi, 2 pieces
Fruit cuts, 1⁄2 bowl
1 tael of meat is equivalent to:
Cooked meat, 4-5 slices
Egg, 1 piece
Silky tofu, 1 piece
1 serving of milk and alternatives is equivalent to:
Low-fat milk, 1 cup (240ml)
Low-fat cheese, 2 slices
Low-fat plain yogurt, 1 pot (150ml)
FOOD EXCHANGE LIST
The Exchange Lists are the basis of a meal planning
system designed by a committee of the American
Diabetes Association and the American Dietetic
Association. The Exchange Lists. The reason for
dividing food into six different groups is that foods vary
in their carbohydrate, protein, fat, and calorie content.
List 1 - Cereal Exchange
30 gm provide: Carbohydrate 20 gm, Protein 2 gm
Cereals Household Measures Wt/Vol. Calories
Rice 30 gms uncooked 100
Wheat flour 30 gms uncooked 100
Dalia 1/2 katori cooked 30 gms uncooked 100
Sago 30 gms uncooked 100
White flour 30 gms uncooked 100
Bread 2 slices 40 gms 100
List 2 - Fat Exchange
50 gm Calories; Fat 5.5 gm
Fats Household Wt.[gm]. Calories
Measures
Butter 1 1/2 teaspoon 7.5 50
Ghee 1 teaspoon 5.5 50
Hydrogenated fat 1 teaspoon 5.5 50
[Vanaspati]
Oil [Coconut, Mustard 1 teaspoon 5.5 50
Sunflower, Corn,
Groundnut, Cotton seed,
Til, Palm]
Cashewnuts 10 50
Groundnuts, roasted 10 50
Walnuts 7.5 50
Pistachio 7.5 50
Almonds
List 3 - Milk & Milk Products
50 Calories; Protein 2.5 gm
Milk & Milk Products Household Measures Wt./Vol. Calories
[without sugar]
Tea + 75 ml milk 50
Khoya 15 gm 50
1 medium glass 150 ml
*provides 5 gm protein
List 4 - Vegetable Exchange
50 Calories; Carbohydrate 10 gm
Vegetables Household Measures Wt. (gm) Calories
Beetroot [Chukander] 75 50
Carrot 1-2 No. 105 50
Colocasia [arbi] 45 50
Onion [big] 1 No. 90 50
Onion [small] 2 No. 75 50
Potato 1/2 No. 45 50
Sweet potato 30 50
Tapioca 30 50
Yam [Zimikand] 45 50
Broad beans 90 50
Cluster beans 90 50
Double beans 50 50
Jack, Tender 105 50
Jackfruit seeds 30 50
Leeks 60 50
Peas 45 50
Singhara 45 50
Sambar 1/4 katori 35 ml 50
Cooked vegetable 1/2 katori 50
1 katori: volume 150 ml
List 5 - Fruit Exchange
50 Calories; Carbohydrate 10 gm
Fruits Size/No. Wt. (ml) Calories
Apple 1 small 75 50
Amla 20 medium 90 50
Banana 1/4 medium 30 50
Cashew fruit 2 medium 90 50
Custard apple 1/4 50 50
Dates 3 30 50
Figs 6 medium 135 50
Grapes 20 105 50
Grape fruit 1/2 big 150 50
Jack fruit 3 medium pieces 60 50
Mango 1 small 90 50
Melon 1/4 medium 270 50
Orange 1 small 90 50
Lemon 1 medium 90 50
Papaya 2 medium 120 50
Peach 1 medium 135 50
Pear 1 medium 90 50
Plums 4 medium 120 50
Pineapple 1 1/2 slices (round) 90 50
Strawberry 40 105 50
Sweetlime 1 medium 150 50
Tomato 4 medium 240 50
Water melon 1/4 small 175 50
List 7 - Flesh Food Exchange
70 Calories; Protein 10 gm
Flesh Foods Household Wt. (gm) Calories
Measures
Drinks*
Household Vol. Calories
Measures
Orange juice 1 big glass 200 ml. 30
Tomato juice 1 big glass 200 ml 30
Apple juice 1 big glass 200 ml 100
Grape juice 1 big glass 200 ml 80
Mango juice 1 big glass 200 ml 150
Desserts*
Household Wt/vol. Calories
Measures
Custard 150 gm 360
Fruit salad 150 gm 150
Fruit salad with cream 150 gm 300
Icecream 150 gm 380
Carrot halwa 1 medium katori 100 gm 600
Badami halwa 100 gm 570
Sweets*
Household Wt/vol. Calories
Measures
Coconut burfi 25 gm 110
Gulabjamun 25 gm 200
Laddo 30 gm 160
Rasgulla 150 gm 140
Jam 2 tablespoon 80
Honey 2 tablespoon 48
FOOD LABELS
Labels give you information that can help you decide what to choose as part of an
overall healthy eating plan. For example, it may be OK to eat a sugary cereal if you
make up for it by not eating much sugary stuff for the rest of the day. Checking the
labels on foods can alert you when a food is high in something like sugar so you can be
prepared to make tradeoffs.
Food labels provide more than just nutrition facts, though. They also tell you what's in a
packaged food (i.e., the ingredients). Some food labels also state which country the
food came from, whether the food is organic, and certain health claims.
So who decides what information goes on a food label? In the United States, it's the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Department of Agriculture (USDA).
These agencies require that all food labels show the same nutrition and health
information. This allows consumers to compare different foods and make the choices
that are right for them.
The FDA and USDA regulate any health claims that companies make on their food
labels. When a food says "light" ("lite") or "low fat" on the label, it must meet strict
government definitions in order to make that claim. Foods that are labeled "USDA
organic" are required to have at least 95% organic ingredients.
NUTRIENT GUIDELINES FOR FILIPINOS
The Nutritional Guidelines for Filipinos (NGF) is a set
of dietary guidelines based on the eating pattern,
lifestyle, and health status of Filipinos. The NGF
contains all the nutrition messages to healthy living for
all age groups from infants to adults, pregnant and
lactating women, and the elderly.