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May 12, 2026 Vol. I — Issue 02
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Real Easy Diet.

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Glossary · Diet Types & Patterns

What is Mediterranean Diet?

A vegetable, olive-oil, fish, and legume-forward pattern with the best long-term outcome data of any diet.

Real Easy Diet · Glossary Desk 3-minute read
Term /18 M Diet Types & Patterns
Direct Answer

The Mediterranean diet is a pattern, not a recipe — abundant vegetables, fruit, legumes, whole grains, fish, nuts, and olive oil; moderate dairy and poultry; minimal red meat and added sugar; optional red wine with meals. It has more long-term clinical-trial evidence than any other named diet, including for cardiovascular mortality, type 2 diabetes prevention, and modest sustainable weight loss.

Quick definition

It's a traditional eating pattern from Mediterranean coastal countries — Greece, southern Italy, Spain — codified into research after Ancel Keys's mid-20th-century Seven Countries Study. Modern Mediterranean-diet trials operationalize it as a 14-point adherence score.

How it actually works

The defining PREDIMED trial (Estruch et al., 2018, NEJM, n=7,447) compared a Mediterranean diet supplemented with either extra-virgin olive oil or mixed nuts against a low-fat control. Result: a 30 percent reduction in major cardiovascular events over 4.8 years. The 2024 follow-up data continues to hold up.

For weight loss specifically, Mediterranean produces modest, sustainable losses — 5 to 10 percent of body weight over 12 months in most trials. That's smaller than aggressive keto in the first three months, but much more durable at the two-year mark. Adherence is the reason. People can keep eating this way for life. Most other patterns, they can't.

The mechanisms stack: high fiber improves satiety, olive oil and nuts lower inflammation markers, fish provides omega-3s, and the Mediterranean pattern is naturally lower in calorie density (see volumetrics) without anyone counting.

Why it matters for weight loss

If you want a diet that produces weight loss AND lowers your odds of dying of a heart attack — and that you'll still be doing in five years — Mediterranean is the most-evidenced pattern on the planet. Our 7-day meal plan is structured around it.

Common misconceptions

The biggest myth is that Mediterranean means "pasta and red wine." Traditional Mediterranean is mostly plants. Pasta is a small portion alongside vegetables and beans, not a 16-ounce bowl topped with cream sauce. The American Olive Garden version is not what the trials studied.

The second myth: it's low-fat. It isn't. Calories from fat in PREDIMED ran 41 to 42 percent — well above standard low-fat recommendations. The type of fat matters more than the total. Olive oil and nuts are the engine.

Sources

  1. [01]
  2. [02]
    PREDIMED trial — NEJM New England Journal of Medicine
  3. [03]
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