What do you eat on the Whole30?
Essentially, it’s an elimination diet. The plan restricts all the fore-mentioned foods for a 30-day duration. After that period, food groups may be gradually reintroduced to see if they had any negative impact on your weight, energy, or health issues—mainly autoimmune conditions. (Here are some Whole30 breakfast ideas.)
Followers of the diet create meals that combine grass-fed meats or wild-caught seafood, fruits and veggies, nuts and seeds, and eggs, along with certain fats, including olive oil, clarified butter, and avocado oil. Some surprising foods make the cut: potatoes, unprocessed bacon, and saturated fats if they came from grass-fed meats. (Here’s everything you can—and can’t—eat on the Whole30.)
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What does a Whole30 meal look like?
If it’s tough to imagine surviving without cheese, grains, and any form of sugar, including stevia, agave, and honey, for 30 days. So you may wonder how it is that Instagram shots of Whole30 meals look so tasty, while still complying with all the restrictions. Perhaps that’s the secret of their popularity. Inspiration and creativity are welcome for anyone trying to stick to the plan.
Although she doesn’t endorse the plan as a healthy way to achieve lasting weight loss, registered dietitian nutritionist Jen Bruning, spokesperson for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, points out that some of her favorite meals fit into the Whole30 rubric—things like salmon or chicken bowls with diced vegetables and sweet potatoes or shredded kale salad.
“I’m a fan of one-pot or one-pan meals,” she says. “Mix up your vegetable and protein choices during the week and add some tasty seasoning like chipotle, Mediterranean blend, or Berbere spice.”
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Why do the Whole30 plan?
So what does the Whole30 offer you? Plan co-creator Melissa Hartwig claims the foods that are not allowed on the plan are the most inflammation-causing and blood sugar-disrupting foods. Eliminating them, she suggests, may help you lose weight, have more energy, conquer cravings, and even improve some chronic health issues. Some beg to differ, and the diet ranked 33 out of 35 on U.S. News and World Reports’ list of healthy diets.
Psychologically, it’s possible the plan has a lot in common with detoxes and cleanses. Although you don’t count calories on Whole30, it may make you be more mindful about what you eat. And certainly, cutting empty calories from sugar and alcohol are a plus in any nutritionist’s book. (Read about how this woman lost 36 pounds on Whole30.)