- The ultimate health menu includes salmon terrine, chicken casserole and yogurt blancmange
- Researchers whittled 4,000 health claims down to 222 before creating the superdinner
By Sean Poulter
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Healthy snack: Both salmon and high fibre bread are part of the supermeal
It's not exactly what you could call fast food. In fact, it took years of effort.
Food researchers pored over some 4,000 health claims used by manufacturers and supermarkets to tempt shoppers into buying their products.
These were whittled down to only 222 that were judged to have basis in scientific fact â" and from those they have concocted a menu that is being hailed as the healthiest ever.
It includes a series of superfoods that can provide you not only with a filling main meal but also plenty of extra snacks and treats with equal health- promoting benefits.
And if youâre a follower of that popular belief that eating healthily has to be boring, think again.
This menu promises to be appetising and tasty too.
It was created by scientists at Leatherhead Food Research, an independent British organisation, using the 222 surviving health claims which have now been cleared by EU food watchdogs.
Health-giving components include Omega 3 fish oils, which are good for cholesterol, and folates, found in high-fibre multigrain bread and which boost the brain and developing babies in the womb.

The menu starts with a fresh and smoked salmon terrine, which contains Omega 3 and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) which is good for the arteries, heart and brain.
An accompanying mixed leaf salad with a dressing of extra virgin olive oil is good for maintaining normal blood cholesterol levels. Chicken casserole with lentils and mixed vegetables is a particularly nutritious main meal, with the study showing it could safely make 80 official health claims.
The protein in it âcontributes to a growth in muscle massâ, while the pantothenic acid found in lentils can help reduce tiredness and âimprove mental performanceâ.

Walnuts are part of the healthiest meal ever according to scientists
For dessert, a live yogurt-based blancmange topped with walnuts and a sugar-free caramel-flavoured sauce scores well as being good for digestion, the teeth and blood glucose control.
The inclusion of guar gum in the dessert is said to help in the maintenance of normal blood cholesterol, while lactulose âcontributes to an acceleration of intestinal transitâ.
The walnuts in the topping are a superfood â" consumption of 30g a day, or a small handful, is proven to âcontribute to the improvement of the elasticity of blood vesselsâ.
The scientists also included their own sports drink creation which could genuinely claim to boost performance. Its many ingredients include micro nutrients such as biotin, calcium, zinc, chromium copper, iron, potassium, selenium, and magnesium.
Biotin, for example, can help the metabolism, the nervous system, skin and hair, while calcium is good for muscle function and the bones.

Eat your greens: The study showed that salad as well as berries and nuts are a vital part of a healthy diet, so there is no escape from vegetables
Other recommendations include a concoction for dieters â" a mixed berry shake that serves as a meal replacement.
Its ingredients include Glucomannan, which contributes to weight loss for someone on a calorie controlled or energy restricted diet.
For cold days or nights, there is a velvety hot chocolate drink containing melatonin, which helps send you to sleep quickly at night.
As a final helpful thought, the experts recommend activated charcoal tablets, which contribute to âreducing excessive flatulence after eatingâ.
Dr Paul Berryman, the Leatherhead chief executive, conceived the idea as a perfect airline meal, but says the ingredients and dishes would work just as well in the home.
âWe have also shown that healthy foods do not have to be dull,â he said. âWe carry out thousands of consumer taste tests a year and one thing is clear. No matter how healthy, if foods do not taste good they will not sell.â
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No thoughts for the large numbers of people who are allergic to any form of nuts.- Toady the Toad, London England, 18/6/2012 02:11 Yes - they'd probably just suggest the sensible move of not including them
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" there is no escape from vegetables"..... that would have been the best headline ever.
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Next week they'll be telling you all these foods are bad for you.
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Let's hope that salmon is wild and not farmed. Check out the diet and daily medications of farmed salmon (to keep them alive in confinement), not forgetting the red dye that is is detrimental to eye health. - raven, expat australia, 18/6/2012 1:58 Let's hope the virgin olive oil isn't lying!
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No thoughts for the large numbers of people who are allergic to any form of nuts.
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Where are the recipes then?
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Let's hope that salmon is wild and not farmed. Check out the diet and daily medications of farmed salmon (to keep them alive in confinement), not forgetting the red dye that is is detrimental to eye health.
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I prefer to enjoy my meals. Give me (personally) a decent curry washed down with a couple of large bottles of Cobra.
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So if I'm peckish later I can treat myself to 'activated charcoal tablets'. Yum!
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food detective Dave Reavely is who you need...
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