Food Balance Wheel

The Food Balance Wheel suggests an alternate interpretation of the USDA Food Guide Pyramid[1] recommendations for balanced eating. Created in Portugal in 1977, and adapted by author Art Dragon,[2] it converts the principles of the food pyramid from a number-based format to a visual presentation that may be more accessible to users interested in balanced eating. The Food guide pyramid was replaced in 2011 with MyPlate.

Background

Fully implementing the guidelines for presenting food groups on a pyramid involves keeping track of food eaten throughout the day, associating each with a specific food group, comparing the total servings within each group against recommendations, and adjusting meals where necessary. The Food Balance Wheel was developed to provide a more visual alternative, for people more inclined to use a method requiring less counting, recording, and comparing.

Theory

Common components of different food groups can each be represented as a continuum of spokes on a wheel. These spokes can then be sized to roughly the same proportions as the food group servings on the food pyramid. Rather than list foods eaten at every meal, as is the case with the food pyramid, food groups are marked in slots provided around the periphery of the wheel. With this arrangement, choosing foods equally spaced from all around the wheel will automatically provide a balanced mix of nutrients equivalent to that recommended by the food pyramid. In addition, ‘balancing’ the wheel by continually choosing foods from the blank slots will help ensure a diversity of nutrients.

Evolution

Design of the Food Balance Wheel started with a modified food pyramid at its center. The placement and relative size of each wheel spoke reflects the pyramid’s food groups and serving sizes. The sequencing of the different foods was based on the USDA Nutritive Value of Foods[3] tables . This arrangement presents the three main nutrient categories (protein, carbohydrates, and fats) as a continuum of different foods transitioning from one to the next, based on the relative proportions of each nutrient. In addition, this layout was adjusted to separate fiber from non-fiber foods, and to place foods containing saturated fat in order from lowest to highest to help steer the user to more healthful food choices.

Benefits of use

A marked up Food Balance Wheel:

See also

References

  1. http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/Fpyr/pmap.htm
  2. Dragon, Art (2008). Balanced Eating Made Easy with the Food Balance Wheel, Sea Level Publishing, ISBN 978-0-9802310-0-7
  3. http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp/Data/HG72/hg72_2002.pdf