Here's why people are obsessed with the Japanese diet
Getty/Sergi Alexander
In fact, the March study, published in The BMJ, found that people who followed the Japanese government's dietary guidelines had a 15% reduced mortality rate, TIME reported.
The Japanese diet is not based on restriction. Instead it's about mindful eating.
That's likely because the Japanese diet not only includes a healthy lifestyle, but also mindful eating, according to registered dietitian nutritionist Rebecca Scritchfield, host of Body Kindness podcast.
"Japanese people eat grains, vegetable, fish ( protein), milk products and fruits in a healthful way," Scritchfield told INSIDER. "They are not avoiding any carbs as American usually do; Japanese diet is not based on restriction."
The Japanese diet places a lot of emphasis on reasonable portion sizes.
Eating well has long been a key component to the Japanese lifestyle, according to the nutrition expert. The cultural practice of "hara hachi bu," which she says is still followed by the people of Okinawa, advises eating only until a person is 80% full.
"The idea is, enjoy your food, don't eat too much. Overall as a culture, they're very cognizant of portion sizes, but it's not about dieting," Scritchfield said.
The diet is made up mostly of healthy carbs, fish, sea vegetables, and fermented foods.
The diet includes carbs (such as white rice, buckwheat noodles and rice cakes), fish (which are high in omega 3 fatty acid and reduce the risk of heart disease) and sea vegetables - particularly seaweed, which has fiber, calcium and iron.
It also entails a lot of fermented foods, including fish and soybeans, which help support a healthy gut microbiome.
"Your health and your wellbeing really begin in your gut, because the bacteria it's producing helps improve your immune system so you don't get sick as much," Scritchfield said.
The Japanese diet also entails a lot of kiwi fruit, which is packed with vitamin C and helps with digestion, as well as kefir, which is a dairy-based fermented product.
"That's the point: They don't eliminate any one thing but they eat a lot of sea vegetables, a lot of fish, they eat their kiwi fruit and they drink their kefir, and those are all really valuable things," Scritchfield said.
The diet won't necessarily lead to weight loss - but it will lead to healthy eating.
But for people looking to the Japanese diet for weight loss, the nutritionist explained that changing your eating patterns doesn't always lead to shedding a few pounds.
"The real reward is that you have more energy and you feel better, because you're eating better," Scritchfield said. "If you lose weight, it's probably a side effect of many changes that you made, not only of the quality of your food but also by stopping overeating."
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