Trump Team Flips Food Pyramid: Steak & Whole Milk Now Top Tier

Trump Team Flips Food Pyramid: Steak & Whole Milk Now Top Tier

At a Glance

  • The Trump administration released new dietary guidelines on Jan. 7, inverting the classic food pyramid
  • Red meat, full-fat dairy, and protein now sit at the pyramid’s peak; processed foods and added sugar are discouraged
  • Robert F. Kennedy Jr. called the shift the “most significant reset of federal nutrition policy in history”
  • Why it matters: The guidelines shape school lunches, medical advice, and federal nutrition policy for the next five years
upside

The Trump administration has up-ended decades of federal nutrition advice by flipping the food pyramid and placing steak, cheese, and whole milk at the top. The new framework, unveiled by U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., replaces the MyPlate model and targets added sugar and ultra-processed snacks.

The New Pyramid Explained

Kennedy’s “upside-down” pyramid prioritizes protein and healthy fats in the largest section. Vegetables, fruits, and whole grains follow, while the tip warns against highly processed foods and sugary drinks.

Key recommendations:

  • Choose red meat and full-fat dairy over low-fat versions
  • Cook with olive oil, butter, or beef tallow
  • Avoid packaged snacks, chips, cookies, sodas, and energy drinks

Industry and Expert Reactions

The American Heart Association praised the push for more produce and whole grains but warned the red-meat emphasis could push sodium and saturated-fat intake above recommended limits.

Christopher Gardner, a nutrition expert who served on the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, told NPR:

> “I’m very disappointed in the new pyramid that features red meat and saturated fat sources at the very top…it does go against decades and decades of evidence.”

Kennedy countered:

> “Diets rich in vegetables and fruits reduce disease risk more effectively than many drugs…today, our government declares war on added sugar, highly processed foods loaded with additives, added sugar and excess salt.”

What Changes on Your Plate

Old Guidance New Guidance
Limit red meat Prioritize red meat
Choose low-fat dairy Choose full-fat dairy
Avoid saturated fat Embrace butter/beef tallow
Cut salt first Cut added sugar first

The Dietary Guidelines for Americans are updated every five years and directly influence school lunch menus, hospital meals, and doctors’ advice.

Key Takeaways

  • The pyramid inversion places protein, red meat, and full-fat dairy at the top tier
  • Added sugar and ultra-processed foods are now the primary targets
  • Federal programs must align with the new standards within the next compliance cycle
  • Critics warn higher saturated-fat intake could raise cardiovascular risk

The rewritten rules mark the administration’s first major move under the “Make America Healthy Again” banner, setting up a national debate over fat, sugar, and the true drivers of chronic disease.

Author

  • My name is Marcus L. Bennett, and I cover crime, law enforcement, and public safety in Los Angeles.

    Marcus L. Bennett is a Senior Correspondent for News of Los Angeles, covering housing, real estate, and urban development across LA County. A former city housing inspector, he’s known for investigative reporting that exposes how development policies and market forces impact everyday families.

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