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Chicken Greek Salad with Lemon-Herb Dressing

Food consumption and the actual statistics of cardiovascular diseases

A broad cross-country analysis revisits—and overturns—the conclusions drawn from Ancel Keys’ Seven Countries Study

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Grilled herb-marinated chicken breast served over a vibrant Greek salad, finished with a tangy lemon and olive oil dressing.

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Ingredients

For the Chicken:
6 oz chicken breast, butterflied
1 Tbsp butter (for cooking)
½ tsp dried oregano
½ tsp garlic powder
¼ tsp black pepper
Salt, to taste

For the Greek Salad:
½ cup cucumber, diced
¼ cup cherry tomatoes, halved
¼ cup red bell pepper, chopped
2 Tbsp red onion, thinly sliced
¼ cup Kalamata olives, halved
¼ cup feta cheese, crumbled

For the Lemon-Herb Dressing:
2 Tbsp olive oil (for finishing)
1 Tbsp lemon juice
½ tsp dried oregano
¼ tsp dried thyme
¼ tsp garlic powder
Salt and black pepper, to taste

Macronutrients

Protein: 44g
Fat: 50g
Carbs: 8g

Preparation

Cook the chicken: Season chicken with oregano, garlic powder, salt, and pepper. Heat butter in a skillet over medium-high heat. Sear the chicken for 4–5 minutes per side until cooked through. Let rest, then slice.

Make the salad: Combine cucumber, cherry tomatoes, red bell pepper, red onion, olives, and crumbled feta in a mixing bowl.

Mix the dressing: In a small bowl, whisk together olive oil, lemon juice, oregano, thyme, garlic powder, salt, and pepper.

Assemble: Plate the salad, top with sliced chicken, and drizzle generously with the lemon-herb dressing.

Men use 75 lb.
Women use 55 lb.

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In this ecological study, Pavel Grasgruber and colleagues reassessed the relationship between diet and cardiovascular disease using food consumption and health outcome data from more than 40 European countries, dramatically expanding the scope of analysis beyond the seven countries selected by Ancel Keys in his influential Seven Countries Study. Whereas Keys based his conclusions on a small, non-random subset of nations, the authors examined all countries for which reliable data were available, allowing the diet–heart hypothesis to be tested against a far more comprehensive and representative dataset.

When viewed across this broader population, the relationships claimed by Keys do not hold. Higher consumption of total fat and animal protein was generally associated with lower cardiovascular mortality and better cardiometabolic markers, while higher reliance on carbohydrates—particularly cereal-based carbohydrates—tracked with worse outcomes. Although the authors acknowledge the limits of ecological data, they conclude that Keys’ original findings were highly dependent on selective country inclusion, and that expanding the dataset fundamentally alters the conclusions, calling into question the evidentiary basis for decades of low-fat dietary guidance.

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