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Tag: diet trends

  • Gordon Ramsay slams ‘stupid’ Ozempic-inspired restaurant menu trend

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    As Ozempic and Mounjaro reshape eating habits, some restaurants are adapting — and Gordon Ramsay isn’t impressed.

    The celebrity chef and star of Fox’s “Next Level Chef” said he thinks the new trend of GLP-1-inspired menus at restaurants is “stupid.”

    “If I ever hear that word again, the ‘Mounjaro menu,’ I will [expletive] flip my lid,” Ramsay told Tasting Table.

    OZEMPIC BOOM COLLIDES WITH AMERICA’S EATING HABITS AS RESTAURANTS SHRINK PORTIONS

    “I’ve never heard anything so embarrassing in all my [expletive] life that chefs are now getting organized with smaller tasting menus to support the weight-loss jab. I’ve never heard anything so stupid in all my life.”

    Ramsay said dining out is meant to be “a celebration.”

    Celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay recently said GLP-1-inspired restaurant menus are “stupid.” (Pablo Cuadra/Getty Images)

    “It’s a reconnection. It’s a moment of no politics. It’s a moment of neutral ground, having fun, catching up and enjoying,” Ramsay added. 

    “To supplement those menus with tasting menus that are Mounjaro kitted out for small portions, I find it embarrassing.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to the Washington, D.C.-based National Restaurant Association for comment.

    FAST FOOD GOES GLP-1: SHAKE SHACK JOINS PROTEIN CRAZE WITH NEW OZEMPIC-FRIENDLY MENU

    Recent research suggests that when GLP-1 users go out to eat, they aren’t abandoning restaurants altogether — they’re ordering differently.

    A January study from Chicago-based research company Circana found that GLP-1 users decreased the average number of items ordered per visit by just 1%, while favoring main dishes over sides.

    Young friends having fun eating brunch at healthy food restaurant, salads, veggie burgers, fried eggs and smoothies and juices seen on table.

    Some restaurants and fast-food chains are catering to GLP-1 users with menus offering smaller portions. (iStock)

    The research also showed growing demand for vegetables, fruit and nutrient-dense foods.

    That’s prompted many restaurants and fast-food chains to adapt, offering smaller portions targeting the GLP-1 consumer.

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    Minnesota-based chef Andrew Zimmern told Fox News Digital last year that restaurants should be offering “more affordable menus with smaller portions of meat or animal protein as the centerpiece of the plate, so that more people can engage in restaurant culture.”

    Ramsay also railed on some other recent restaurant trends, including smashed avocado.

    “Foams … look like your cat’s puked up on it.”

    “Do you have any idea how many ways you can make a delicious avocado?” Ramsay told Tasting Table.

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    “I had an avocado soup in Oaxaca a couple of months back, a beautiful chilled avocado soup with queso fresco and finished with a beautiful little pickled habanero, and it was exceptional. But if I still see this word ‘smashed avocado,’ honestly, it frustrates the hell out of me.”

    Gordon Ramsay smiles while sitting on a couch during a recording of "The Jennifer Hudson Show."

    Ramsay also revealed some of his other restaurant pet peeves. (Michael Yarish/WBTV via Getty Images)

    His other pet peeve, Ramsay revealed, is foam.

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    “Foams are for shaving, right?” he said. 

    “Foams have a 30-second window. After that, on the plate, they look like your cat’s puked up on it.”

    Fox News Digital reached out to Ramsay’s representatives for additional comment.

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    Fox News Digital’s Deirdre Bardolf contributed reporting. 

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  • RFK Jr.’s barnyard ringtone interrupts White House MAHA briefing, sparks laughs

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    A White House press briefing focused on Make America Healthy Again policies briefly paused Wednesday when Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s phone went off, showcasing a duck quacking ringtone. 

    “I’m sorry,” Kennedy said as he paused his remarks at the White House press briefing’s podium as he silenced his phone. His ringtone blared ducks quacking, sparking jokes from Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins and laughter from reporters. 

    Kennedy joined the press briefing flanked by other health leaders within the administration to unveil new dietary guidelines focused on Americans eating “real foods” and not ultra-processed meals in a move aimed at addressing chronic disease and childhood illnesses. 

    TRUMP ADMINISTRATION TO UNVEIL NEW DIETARY GUIDELINES AS FDA PLANS SWEEPING 2026 FOOD OVERHAUL

    Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s duck-quacking ringtone briefly interrupted the press briefing Jan. 7, 2025.  (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)

    As Kennedy’s phone rang out with ducks quacking, Rollins quipped: “Duck is also high in protein. Duck is a good thing to eat everybody.”

    The press briefing broke out into chuckles before Kennedy got back to business and continued discussing his team’s MAHA efforts, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s overhaul of the U.S. childhood vaccine schedule, which reduces the number of routine immunizations recommended for children.

    RFK JR’S DYE-FREE FOOD VISION BLOCKED BY OBAMA-APPOINTED JUDGE

    Kennedy is an environmental lawyer and self-avowed lover of nature. Before his confirmation to serve in the federal government, Kennedy was well-known on social media for posting videos showing off wild critters he came across on hikes in Southern California or videos showing off his falconry skills. 

    RFK Jr. hiking

    Robert F. Kennedy Jr. hikes with one of his two Gordon Setter dogs, Ronan, in the Santa Monica Mountains, in Los Angeles, March 18, 2024.  (Mike Blake/Reuters)

    The press conference unveiled an updated, inverted food pyramid built on meat, fats, fruits and vegetables. While whole grains are now at the narrow bottom of the inverted pyramid. 

    “The new guidelines recognize that whole, nutrient-dense food is the most effective path to better health and lower health care costs,” Kennedy said. “Protein and healthy fats are essential, and were wrongly discouraged in prior dietary guidelines. We are ending the war on saturated fats.”

    RFK JR LAUNCHES INVESTIGATION INTO SCHOOL FOR ALLEGED VACCINATION OF CHILD WITHOUT PARENTAL CONSENT

    Karoline Leavitt and HHS officials

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks during a briefing with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins at the White House, Jan. 7, 2026, in Washington. (Jacquelyn Martin/The Associated Press)

    Kennedy added that if foreign adversaries wanted to throttle and weaken the U.S., they’d “addict us to ultra-processed foods.”

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    “If a foreign adversary sought to destroy the health of our children, cripple our economy, to weaken our national security, there would be no better strategy than to addict us to ultra-processed foods,” he said.

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  • America’s strangest food obsessions of 2025 alarmed experts and took over social media

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    From luxury produce selling for nearly $20 apiece to babies gnawing on ribeye steaks, food and drink extremes in 2025 reflected American culture in unique ways. 

    Viral videos, social media challenges and wellness-driven experiments pushed boundaries in grocery aisles, with coffee cups and even for high chairs. 

    The global protein supplement market surged to as much as $30 billion in 2025, according to some industry analyses, with no signs of slowing as consumers chase perceived health and wellness benefits.

    PROTEIN-PACKED COMFORT FOOD ROCKED 2025, GOOGLE’S TOP 10 VIRAL RECIPES REVEAL

    Whether driven by indulgence, health fads or shock value, these six trends reported by Fox News Digital stood out as some of the strangest and most talked-about bites and beverages of the year.

    Check these out.

    Protein-packed foods and drinks surged in popularity in 2025. (iStock)

    1. $20 strawberries

    A Los Angeles grocery store stunned shoppers by selling a single strawberry for $19.99. 

    Imported from Japan, the Elly Amai strawberry is packaged in its own display case. Influencers praised its flavor, while critics dismissed the price as a “social experiment.” 

    GAS STATION SPIN ON CLASSIC ITALIAN DESSERT GOES VIRAL: ‘ROAD TRIP LUXURY’

    Some joked that it was “still cheaper than eggs,” a nod to another wild trend of 2025. Soaring egg prices at one point topped $8 a dozen, driven by disease-related supply disruptions and broader food inflation.

    Gourmet elly amai strawberries in a wooden a box

    Luxury Japanese strawberries drew both praise and backlash after selling for nearly $20 each.  (Elly Amai)

    2. ‘Carnivore babies’

    The controversial “carnivore baby” trend took off on social media, with some parents feeding infants butter, bone broth, sardines and even ribeye steak instead of traditional baby food. 

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    While some doctors called the approach ancestral and nutrient-dense, many pediatric experts warned that cutting out fruits and vegetables could pose serious health risks for developing children.

    Baby boy eating chicken leg, smiling in high chair in kitchen

    Infants have been fed butter, bone broth and steak — sparking controversy among pediatric experts. (iStock)

    3. Luxury water

    At upscale restaurants, water became the new wine, with curated water menus offering sommelier guidance on mineral content, acidity and mouthfeel. Bottles have been priced from $11 to as much as $95. 

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    Driven in part by wellness trends and Gen Zers drinking less alcohol, the booming “fine water” movement sparked both fascination and ridicule as diners debated whether luxury water represented refined indulgence or was simply pretentious.

    4. Protein preoccupations

    The protein obsession continued throughout 2025, spilling far beyond shakes and bars into everyday foods and drinks. 

    Viral trends promoted protein lattes, clear protein drinks and even Parmesan cheese wedges as cleaner whole-food alternatives to bars and powders, even as dietitians cautioned the craze is often driven by marketing and is easy to take too far.

    Young woman holding a piece of Parmesan cheese at the main square in Parma town in Italy with chunk in her mouth as she smiles, looking up.

    Some say eating Parmesan cheese wedges has been taken too far. (iStock)

    5. Butter-dipped ice cream

    The Connecticut-based Stew Leonard’s grocery store ignited social media debate after unveiling butter-dipped vanilla soft-serve cones, coating ice cream in melted butter for a crunchy, salty shell. 

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    Some viewers were horrified while others were intrigued. Many admitted they were curious to try it. 

    Store officials described the treat as “addictive” and “totally decadent.”

    Gif of ice cream in butter

    Stew Leonard’s coats a cone of vanilla soft-serve ice cream in “real butter.” (Stew Leonard’s)

    6. ‘BeanTok’

    “BeanTok” gained traction as TikTok users claimed that eating about two cups of beans a day improved digestion, mood and appetite control. 

    Experts said the trend’s benefits are largely driven by fiber and resistant starch, which support gut health, blood sugar regulation and feelings of fullness. 

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    The craze reflects a broader resurgence of interest in fiber, as consumers look for food-based ways to naturally improve digestion and metabolic health.

    Fox News Digital’s Andrea Margolis, Khloe Quill and Angelica Stabile contributed reporting.

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  • Red meat can help your mood if part of a healthy, balanced diet, study suggests

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    Lean red meat could support mental health as long as it’s part of an overall healthy diet, according to an exploratory new study.

    Researchers at South Dakota State University (SDSU) analyzed data from the American Gut Project, a large, open-source microbiome initiative with over 11,000 participants. 

    The study, published as an abstract in May in the journal Current Developments in Nutrition, examined 4,915 adults and grouped them by red-meat intake and diet quality based on the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Healthy Eating Index (HEI), which scores diets on a scale of 0 to 100.

    STUDY CLAIMS VEGETARIANS MORE ‘AMBITIOUS’ AS MEAT EATERS CALL OUT ‘OVERSIMPLIFICATION’

    Participants with higher HEI scores — regardless of red-meat intake — were less likely to report depression, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and bipolar disorder. 

    But those who ate red meat as part of a high-quality diet showed additional benefits. 

    New research suggests that eating red meat as part of a high-quality diet may improve mental health. (iStock)

    Those benefits include higher protein intake; better adequacy of key brain-supporting nutrients such as zinc, selenium, vitamin B-12 and choline, which help regulate memory, mood, muscle control and other functions; and a more diverse gut microbiota.

    Previous studies have found that gut bacteria produce neurotransmitters such as serotonin and dopamine, which are central to mood regulation, cognition and stress response and resilience. 

    Lean red meat had a slightly less disruptive effect on the gut than chicken, Fox News Digital previously reported.

    “What was really compelling was the significant nutritional benefit we saw in healthy eaters who consumed red meat,” Samitinjaya Dhakal, assistant professor at SDSU’s School of Health and Human Sciences, said in a news release. 

    EATING CHICKEN LINKED TO HIGHER MORTALITY RATES, OBSERVATIONAL STUDY SUGGESTS

    The preliminary findings, he added, support a “less rigid” approach to healthy eating that focuses on dietary patterns rather than cutting out certain foods altogether, like red meat, which previous research has linked to cardiovascular disease and cancer.

    “This suggests the public health message shouldn’t be about complete elimination — but about building a high-quality diet into which lean red meat can fit,” Dhakal said. 

    Friends smiling being served meat at restaurant by waitress

    Healthy, balanced diets showed lower odds of depression, PTSD and bipolar disorder in those who consumed them. (iStock)

    Yet experts warn that other research has tied red and processed meat to poor physical and cognitive health outcomes. 

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    A 2020 United Kingdom study of adults aged 37 to 73 linked higher red-meat consumption to weaker problem-solving, short-term memory and planning skills.

    And a 10-year study of over 133,000 U.S. nurses found that eating red meat — particularly processed types like bacon and sausage — was tied to faster memory decline and a higher risk of dementia.

    “This study makes the important distinction of assessing red meat in the context of a healthy diet.”

    “It’s worth remembering that we still have decades of evidence linking processed and high-fat meats to things like heart disease and diabetes,” noted Jenny Shields, Ph.D., a clinical health psychologist based in The Woodlands, Texas. 

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    “This study doesn’t erase that,” Shields told Fox News Digital. “What it does say is that, in the context of an already healthy diet, a moderate amount of lean red meat doesn’t seem to cause harm, and it may help fill gaps in nutrients like B-12 or zinc.”

    A balanced diet can play a powerful part in the foundation for better focus, energy and mood, she said.

    Long-term studies that directly compare diets with and without red meat would be needed to prove correlation instead of just causation, she added.

    Grilled beef steaks seen garnished with veggies and potatoes in background

    Lean red meat can deliver nutrients like vitamin B-12, zinc and choline, according to experts. (iStock)

    “Our next phase of research will involve prospective and controlled interventional studies on how different dietary patterns and specific diet components influence nutrient adequacy and brain health,” Dhakal said. 

    Shalene McNeill, a registered dietitian nutritionist and executive director of nutrition research for the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA), based in Colorado — which provided funding for the research — told Fox News Digital that many studies that link red and processed meat to chronic disease evaluate meat intake as part of unhealthy dietary patterns and lifestyles. 

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    “This study makes the important distinction of assessing red meat in the context of a healthy diet,” she said.

    The full study is currently under review for publication.

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