Superfoods: why they’re a myth

Rosemary Stanton says, 'I get concerned when people find that something’s good then they stick it in their Coco Pops.'
Rosemary Stanton says, 'I get concerned when people find that something’s good then they stick it in their Coco Pops.'
Superfoods fad is another sign of the never-ending search for a magic bullet, says renowned Australian nutritionist

There are diets that tell you to count calories and diets that tell you to focus on food groups, diets that tell you to avoid carbs and diets that tell you to carbo-load.

There are diets that tell you to eat a handful of blueberries, or walnuts, or that you should load all your foods with lemon juice, cinnamon or turmeric. Eggs, potatoes and full-fat dairy are out, then they’re back in.

It’s a whole lot of sound and fury that achieves nothing, Dr Rosemary Stanton told the BBC Future World-Changing Ideas Summit in Sydney.

“The superfoods fad is yet another sign of the never-ending search for a magic bullet to solve problems,” says the Australian nutritionist and dietitian renowned for her no-nonsense approach. “Such thinking, which ignores the multi-factorial nature of diet-related health problems, is probably the greatest myth.”

The focus on individual nutrients or ingredients is a big problem. Stanton argues this takes the focus away from fresh produce and towards processed foods.

A fixation with specific vitamins or mineral also creates an environment in which manufacturers can add nutrients to food and make health claims for those foods.

“Then it achieves a health halo and it sells, and you see this with heavily sweetened breakfast cereals,” Stanton says. “I get concerned when people find that something’s good then they stick it in their Coco Pops.”

Stanton points out that she is yet to find an Australian deficient in the sort of nutrients that go into fortified cereals.

She is happy to single out one ingredient: sugar. She argues that a sugar tax is low-hanging fruit that governments would be foolish not to pick.

But the food industry around the world has been fighting against such an approach, which Stanton takes as a sign of encouragement.

“Whenever the processed food industry opposes something vehemently, I’ve got a pretty good idea it would work.”

Stanton argues that the same age-old dietary wisdom still holds: lots of fresh fruit and vegetables, whole grains, small amounts of protein, particularly fish and seafood.

For this reason, the Mediterranean diet is often upheld by many as the closest thing to a dietary magic bullet, heavy in plant-based foods and oily fish.

Despite Stanton’s objection to painting so-called ‘superfoods’ as a nutritional panacea, she supports efforts to find new, environmentally sustainable sources of food as part of a balanced diet.

Marine ecologist Pia Winberg from Venus Shell Systems offered one option, suggesting seaweed could become a major component of food in the future.

Her involvement with seaweed began with projects using seaweeds to clean up nutrient waste along coastlines. But when she and others began realising its nutritional value, their focus shifted to food.

Winberg’s team cultivates a seaweed that is not only a rich source of protein; it also provides omega-3 fatty acids, fibre, anti-oxidants and an array of vitamins and minerals. It could be a sustainable alternative to fish and other seafood.

The challenge is how to get something like seaweed into the diet of an individual more familiar with food that comes in polystyrene containers. “We need to make it easy for mainstream individuals to eat, rather than try to change their practices,” Winberg said.

To achieve that, they’ve developed an extract containing all the important ingredients, which can be put into existing foods such as pasta.

Cultivation of seaweed as a foodstuff can have environmental benefits beyond taking pressure off exhausted fish stocks. “Creating seaweed industries is a great incentive to maintain clean coastlines,” Winberg says.

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