The foods eaten daily in the world's longest-lived communities, available at your grocery store. Filter by region, category, or where to buy.
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🫘SardiniaLegumes
Divina
Fava Beans in Brine
Tender, ready-to-eat fava beans from the Mediterranean, packed in light brine. Naturally high in L-dopa and one of the highest-protein-per-calorie legumes available.
High ProteinRich in Folate
Fava beans appear in the Sardinian diet daily, mashed with olive oil. High in L-dopa, which supports dopamine production. More protein per calorie than most legumes.
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🍷SardiniaBeverages
Sella & Mosca
Cannonau di Sardegna DOC
The signature wine of Sardinia, made from grenache grapes grown in stress conditions that boost polyphenol content. A daily Blue Zone staple, shared with food and friends.
Antioxidant-RichFlavonoids
Cannonau grapes grow in high-stress conditions producing unusually high polyphenols. Sardinian men drink 1 to 2 small glasses daily with food and friends.
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🧀SardiniaDairy
Locatelli
Pecorino Romano Aged
Traditional Italian sheep-milk cheese aged for over 9 months. Stronger and saltier than cow-milk parmesan, used by Sardinians as a finishing flavor rather than a main course.
CLA Fatty AcidsCalcium-Rich
Sheep milk has higher CLA content studied for anti-cancer properties. Sardinians shave small amounts over food rather than eating large portions.
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🍞SardiniaGrains
Alvarado St. Bakery
Sprouted Sourdough Bread
Long-fermented sourdough made from sprouted whole wheat. The slow rise mimics traditional Sardinian pane carasau and develops a deeper flavor with a lower glycemic load.
Low GlycemicGut-Friendly
Long fermentation by wild yeast partially breaks down gluten and phytic acid, releasing minerals and lowering glycemic impact versus commercial yeast breads.
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🍠OkinawaProduce
Melissa's
Purple Sweet Potato (Imo)
The Okinawan staple in its original form. Deep purple flesh from concentrated anthocyanins, sweeter and drier than orange varieties. Roast whole or steam and mash.
Anti-InflammatoryCognitive Support
Made up over 60 percent of traditional Okinawan caloric intake. Purple anthocyanins are linked to improved memory and reduced inflammation in published research.
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🍲OkinawaFermented
Miso Master
Organic Traditional Red Miso
Long-aged red miso made in North Carolina using traditional Japanese methods. Rich, salty, and packed with live probiotic cultures. The base of an authentic Okinawan breakfast.
ProbioticB VitaminsGut Microbiome
Eaten at least once daily in Okinawa. Do not boil: dissolve in warm water to preserve active cultures. Japanese studies link daily miso to lower cancer rates.
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🍵OkinawaBeverages
Gaia Herbs
Turmeric Supreme Daily Tea
Turmeric blended with black pepper for absorption, plus ginger and licorice for a warm, slightly sweet brew. Drinkable any time, mirrors Okinawan ukon tea tradition.
Anti-InflammatoryJoint Support
Okinawans drink ukon (turmeric tea) regularly. Including black pepper extract (piperine) is known to substantially increase curcumin absorption.
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🟦OkinawaDairy
Nasoya
Organic Extra Firm Tofu
Pressed firm enough to grill, sear, or cube into soup. Made from US-grown organic soybeans with no GMOs. One block delivers about 40g of complete plant protein.
Complete ProteinIsoflavonesBone Health
Consumed daily in traditional Okinawa. Soy foods are one of the most documented dietary pillars of the Okinawan centenarian population, cited consistently in Blue Zones research.
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🥜Loma LindaNuts
Kirkland Signature
Mixed Nuts Unsalted (No Peanuts)
A clean mix of cashews, almonds, walnuts, pistachios, and Brazil nuts. No added oils, no salt, no peanuts. Eat a small handful five times a week to follow the Adventist pattern.
Heart HealthOmega-3sLongevity Staple
Adventist Health Study II found nut consumption to be one of the single strongest dietary predictors of longevity. Walnuts highest in omega-3s, almonds in vitamin E, Brazil nuts in selenium.
Steel-cut and stone-rolled into thick flakes that hold their texture in a slow-cooked porridge. The classic Adventist breakfast, especially with soy milk and walnuts.
CholesterolBeta-GlucanHeart Health
Beta-glucan is one of the most rigorously studied cholesterol-lowering compounds in nutrition. FDA allows a cardiovascular health claim for oats. Thick-cut has lower glycemic impact than quick oats.
Single-serve guacamole cups made from real Hass avocados, lime, and a touch of salt. Cold-pressed (HPP) rather than heat-treated to preserve healthy fats and color.
Healthy FatsPotassium
The Adventist Health Study associated regular avocado consumption with favorable metabolic markers. Avocados are a staple fat source in the Loma Linda Adventist diet, replacing butter and processed oils.
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🥛Loma LindaDairy
Silk
Organic Soy Milk Unsweetened
Made from whole organic soybeans with no added sugar. One cup delivers about 7g of complete plant protein and the isoflavones tied to the Adventist longevity profile.
Plant ProteinIsoflavonesCalcium
Soy milk is the dairy alternative most closely associated with the Adventist longevity profile. The Adventist Health Study found associations between regular soy milk consumption and reduced prostate cancer risk among male participants.
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🫘NicoyaLegumes
Bush's Best
Black Beans No Salt Added
Soft, slow-cooked black turtle beans with no added sodium. The signature legume of the Nicoyan diet, eaten with rice for a complete protein and a daily dose of resistant starch.
Longevity StapleAnthocyaninsResistant Starch
Eaten at least once daily in Nicoya, often twice. The BMJ legume cohort found an 8 percent reduction in all-cause mortality per 20g increase in daily legume consumption. Resistant starch feeds beneficial gut bacteria.
Pliable, mild-flavored tortillas built from cassava, coconut flour, and avocado oil. A clean substitute for stone-ground corn tortillas if you avoid grains entirely.
Mineral-DenseGrain-Free
Traditional Nicoyan tortillas use nixtamalized corn, which dramatically increases calcium content. Siete uses no industrial seed oils and minimal ingredients.
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🫘NicoyaLegumes
Eden Foods
Organic Pinto Beans No Salt Added
Cooked with kombu seaweed in BPA-free cans, with no added salt. Soft enough to mash for refried beans, firm enough for stews. A pantry staple that rivals home-cooked.
BPA-Free CanPrebiotic Fiber
Eden Foods pre-soaks beans and uses kombu seaweed in cooking to reduce gas-causing oligosaccharides. One of the only canned bean brands that does this.
Cold-pressed within hours of harvest from California-grown olives. Look for a green, peppery bite at the back of the throat, the marker of fresh polyphenols.
CardiovascularPolyphenolsAnti-Inflammatory
Ikarians consume roughly 6 tablespoons per day. PREDIMED trial showed 30 percent reduction in major cardiovascular events vs low-fat control. Look for a harvest date: polyphenols drop in stale oil.
Two herbal blends featuring peppermint, fennel, eucalyptus, and licorice. Caffeine-free and gentle enough for the daily afternoon ritual that Ikarians practice.
Cognitive SupportAntioxidantBlood Pressure
Ikarians drink wild herbal teas daily, primarily sage, mint, and rosemary. These contain rosmarinic acid and polyphenols. Daily herbal tea is a consistent feature of Ikarian life documented by Blue Zones researchers.
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🍯IkariaPantry
Attiki
Raw Greek Thyme Honey
Single-source thyme blossom honey from southern Greece. Darker, more complex, and more medicinal than common clover honey. Slightly herbal on the finish.
Antioxidant-DenseAntimicrobial
Greek thyme honey has higher antioxidant concentration than Manuka on several measures. Raw matters: pasteurized honey loses enzymatic activity. Ikarians take a teaspoon dissolved in warm water each morning.
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🍲IkariaLegumes
Westbrae Natural
Organic Lentil Soup
Vegan lentil soup made with carrots, celery, garlic, and a touch of tomato. Heat the can, pour in your best olive oil, finish with lemon. Two ingredients short of an Ikarian fakes.
Folate-RichIronGut Health
To make it authentically Ikarian: heat the soup, then add a generous pour of good olive oil and squeeze of lemon before serving. The lemon aids iron absorption. Olive oil is non-negotiable in Ikaria.
Plump chickpeas cooked with kombu in BPA-free cans. Toss with olive oil and rosemary, roast at 425 for 30 minutes for an Ikarian-style snack that beats any chip.
High FiberManganeseSatiety
Ikarians roast dried chickpeas with olive oil and herbs as a snack (stragalia), replacing chips. Eden Foods pre-soaks and cooks with kombu to reduce indigestible sugars.
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🌿OkinawaPantry
Maine Coast Sea Vegetables
Wild Atlantic Wakame
Hand-harvested wakame from the cold North Atlantic, sun-dried into delicate green strips. Rehydrate in a minute, then toss into miso soup, salads, or grain bowls.
IodineMineralsLow Calorie
Sea vegetables are a daily part of the Okinawan plate, supplying iodine for thyroid function and a compound called fucoxanthin that has been studied for metabolic effects.
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🍝SardiniaGrains
Bionaturae
Organic Whole Wheat Pasta
Bronze-die-cut whole wheat pasta from Italy, with a rough surface that grabs sauce and a far lower glycemic load than refined varieties. Cook al dente for the slowest carb release.
Whole GrainLow Glycemic
Sardinians eat pasta a few times a week, but always with vegetables, beans, and olive oil, never as a standalone carb. Whole wheat keeps the bran and germ intact, slowing absorption and feeding gut bacteria.
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🌰Loma LindaNuts
California Walnuts
Raw Halves & Pieces
Single-ingredient raw walnuts, the most omega-3-dense nut available. Soak overnight to soften their tannic bite, then toss into oatmeal, salads, or eat as a one-handed afternoon snack.
Omega-3 ALABrain HealthHeart Health
Research within the Adventist Health Study found regular walnut consumers had significantly better longevity outcomes than those who rarely ate them. Walnuts are the only nut that provides a meaningful dose of plant-based omega-3.
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🍌NicoyaProduce
Organic Produce
Fair-Trade Plantains
Starchier and larger than dessert bananas. Green plantains slice and fry into tostones, ripe black-spotted ones caramelize into Nicoyan platanos maduros, sweet enough to skip dessert.
PotassiumResistant StarchVitamin A
Plantains are the third leg of the Nicoyan diet alongside black beans and corn tortillas. Eaten green, they deliver resistant starch that feeds gut bacteria. Eaten ripe, they provide natural sweetness without refined sugar.
Farro is one of the oldest cultivated grains in the world and a staple of traditional Sardinian cooking. It has a higher protein and fiber content than modern wheat and a lower glycemic impact. Sardinians have eaten farro in soups and as a side grain for centuries.
Ancient GrainHigh FiberLow Glycemic
Farro was a foundational grain in the Sardinian diet long before modern wheat varieties became dominant. Its outer bran layer is largely intact, delivering nutrients stripped out in refined pasta.
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🍾SardiniaBeverages
Argiolas
Vermentino di Sardegna White Wine
Vermentino is the white wine of Sardinia, produced from grapes grown in the island's mineral-rich volcanic soil. It contains resveratrol and a range of polyphenols similar to red wine and is consumed regularly at midday meals by older Sardinians. A lighter alternative to Cannonau for those who prefer white wine.
PolyphenolsHeart Health
While Cannonau gets most of the attention, Sardinian women in coastal areas have historically preferred Vermentino. The grape grows under significant sun stress, which concentrates its antioxidant content. Like all Sardinian wine consumption, it is always paired with food and shared socially.
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🌾SardiniaGrains
Jovial
Organic Whole Grain Barley
Barley is one of the oldest grains cultivated in Sardinia and was a daily staple before modern wheat became dominant. It contains more beta-glucan fiber per serving than oats, making it one of the most effective cholesterol-lowering whole grains available. Used in soups, stews, and porridges across the Blue Zone highlands.
Beta-GlucanGut HealthCholesterol
Barley formed the backbone of the Sardinian shepherd diet for generations. It is more drought-resistant than wheat and grows naturally in Sardinia's mountainous interior. Barley-thickened minestrone is a traditional staple of the Barbagia highlands.
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🍅SardiniaPantry
Cento
Whole Peeled San Marzano Tomatoes
Tomatoes are a cornerstone of Sardinian minestrone and garden-based cooking. San Marzano tomatoes are lower in acidity and higher in lycopene than standard varieties, and lycopene absorption increases dramatically when tomatoes are cooked in olive oil, exactly how Sardinians prepare them. A pantry staple for replicating traditional Sardinian soups.
LycopeneAntioxidantHeart Health
Tomatoes cooked with olive oil, a staple in Sardinian cooking, produce one of the most bioavailable forms of lycopene in the human diet. Research links regular lycopene consumption to reduced cardiovascular disease risk.
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🫒SardiniaPantry
Divina
Castelvetrano Olives
Olives are eaten daily as a snack and side dish throughout Sardinia. Castelvetrano olives from Sicily are the closest widely available equivalent to the mild, buttery olives eaten fresh in Sardinia. They are less processed than black canned olives, retaining their natural polyphenol content and healthy fat profile.
Healthy FatsPolyphenolsGut Friendly
Sardinians rarely eat olives from a can. They eat them fresh-cured or in brine, preserving the oleocanthal and hydroxytyrosol compounds that give extra virgin olive oil its anti-inflammatory reputation. Snacking on whole olives is one of the simplest ways to add Blue Zone eating habits without changing what you cook.
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🫘SardiniaGrains
Alce Nero
Organic Fava Bean Flour
Fava bean flour is used in traditional Sardinian flatbreads and fritters called panelle. It is naturally gluten-free, higher in protein than wheat flour, and rich in iron, potassium, and zinc. A direct way to replicate the traditional Sardinian practice of cooking with legume-based flours.
High ProteinGluten-FreeMineral-Rich
Before wheat became widely available, Sardinian mountain communities ground dried fava beans into flour for everyday bread. Fava flour flatbreads provided plant protein and complex carbohydrates in a form that kept blood sugar stable over long working days. This tradition is being rediscovered as a longevity-aligned alternative to refined flour.
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🍯SardiniaPantry
Rigoni di Asiago
Organic Sardinian Thistle Honey (Corbezzolo)
Corbezzolo, or strawberry tree honey, is the rarest and most prized honey in Sardinia. It has a distinctly bitter finish and one of the highest antioxidant profiles of any European honey. Sardinian centenarians use local honey as a sweetener, a spread, and a traditional remedy for coughs and digestion.
Rare AntioxidantsAntimicrobialAnti-Inflammatory
Sardinian honey is produced from wildflowers and herbs native to the macchia, the island's dense Mediterranean scrubland. The corbezzolo tree blooms only in autumn and produces a limited honey harvest, making this one of the rarest honeys in the world. Its bitter polyphenols are distinctly different from floral honeys and have been studied for antimicrobial properties.
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🥛SardiniaDairy
Bellwether Farms
Fresh Sheep Milk Yogurt
Sheep milk yogurt is the authentic Sardinian fermented dairy product, closer to what centenarians eat than any cow's milk yogurt. It has a higher fat and protein content than cow's milk yogurt, a richer probiotic culture, and contains CLA fatty acids that have been studied for their metabolic benefits.
CLA Fatty AcidsProbioticGut Health
Sardinian shepherds have been fermenting sheep milk for thousands of years. Sheep milk yogurt provides a richer probiotic culture and higher CLA content than most commercial cow's milk yogurts. Bellwether Farms in California produces one of the closest domestic equivalents available in US stores.
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🌊OkinawaProduce
Maine Coast Sea Vegetables
Dried Wakame Seaweed
Wakame is one of the most consumed seaweeds in Okinawa, added to miso soup and salads daily. It is rich in iodine, fucoxanthin (a carotenoid linked to fat metabolism), magnesium, and calcium. One tablespoon of dried wakame rehydrates to a full serving and adds substantial mineral density to any soup or salad.
IodineFucoxanthinThyroid Support
Okinawans consume seaweed in some form virtually every day. Wakame in particular provides fucoxanthin, a compound studied extensively in Japan for its role in thyroid function and metabolic rate. The combination of wakame in miso broth, a daily ritual in traditional Okinawa, provides iodine, probiotics, and trace minerals in a single bowl.
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🫧OkinawaProduce
Eden Foods
Dried Kombu Seaweed
Kombu is the thick, dried kelp used to make dashi broth, the foundation of Japanese cooking including Okinawan soups. It is one of the richest natural sources of iodine and glutamates in the plant kingdom. Eden Foods adds kombu to all their canned beans to reduce digestive discomfort, making it one of the most functional pantry additions available.
IodineNatural GlutamatesMineral-Dense
Kombu dashi is the flavor base under virtually every Okinawan broth-based dish. Simmering kombu in water for 10 minutes creates a mineral-rich stock with natural umami that replaces the need for sodium-heavy flavor enhancers. The iodine in kombu supports thyroid function, which governs metabolism and energy production across the lifespan.
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🍵OkinawaBeverages
Ito En
Organic Okinawan Sanpin Cha (Jasmine Green Tea)
Sanpin cha, a jasmine-scented green tea, is the most consumed beverage in traditional Okinawa, sipped throughout the day from morning to evening. Green tea is one of the most researched longevity beverages in existence, with EGCG linked to reduced rates of heart disease, several cancers, and cognitive decline. Okinawan green tea consumption is estimated at 3 to 5 cups per day.
EGCGHeart HealthCognitive Support
Okinawans nurse green tea all day long, a habit documented by Blue Zones researchers as one of the most consistent behaviors among centenarians on the island. The jasmine variety (sanpin cha) has been the preferred form for centuries, combining the antioxidants of green tea with the calming aromatics of jasmine flowers. It is consumed without milk or sugar.
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🍜OkinawaFermented
Hikari Miso
Instant Miso Soup with Wakame
The most practical way to build the daily miso habit that Okinawan centenarians have maintained for life. Each packet contains miso paste and dried wakame, producing a complete traditional bowl in 60 seconds. Choose reduced-sodium varieties and look for packets that contain live cultures rather than pasteurized miso.
ProbioticConvenientUmami
The simplicity of this product mirrors the Okinawan reality: miso soup is not a special dish, it is an automatic daily ritual. Okinawan centenarians interviewed by Blue Zones researchers consistently described starting every morning with miso soup and sweet potato before anything else. Building the habit matters more than perfecting the preparation.
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⬜OkinawaDairy
House Foods
Silken Tofu
Silken tofu is distinct from firm tofu and is used in Okinawan soups, desserts, and cold dishes. It has a custard-like texture and is typically eaten without cooking, dressed with soy sauce, ginger, and bonito. A different preparation and use than firm tofu, covering the full spectrum of traditional Okinawan soy consumption.
IsoflavonesSilky TextureVersatile
Okinawans eat tofu in multiple forms throughout the day, not just as a protein substitute. Silken tofu in cold dishes (hiyayakko) is a common summer staple that requires no cooking at all. Traditional Okinawan tofu is denser than mainland Japanese varieties, but silken tofu is the closest widely available American equivalent for cold preparations.
Natto is fermented soybeans with a sticky texture and pungent flavor, eaten at breakfast in Japan and Okinawa for centuries. It is the richest known dietary source of vitamin K2 (MK-7), which is critical for directing calcium into bones rather than arteries. One small serving of natto provides more K2 than any other food by a wide margin.
Vitamin K2NattokinaseBone Health
Natto is one of the most pharmacologically active whole foods in the diet. Nattokinase, an enzyme produced during fermentation, has been studied for cardiovascular and blood-flow effects. Regular natto consumption has been associated in Japanese research with better bone health outcomes.
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🌿OkinawaPantry
Organic Traditions
Organic Moringa Leaf Powder
Moringa is a leafy green native to the subtropical regions of Asia and consumed in Okinawa as a vegetable and dried powder. It contains more iron per gram than spinach, more calcium per gram than milk, and significant amounts of vitamins C, A, and E. The powder dissolves easily into soups, smoothies, or rice dishes.
IronVitamin CAnti-Inflammatory
Okinawa's subtropical climate supports a wide variety of leafy green vegetables that are not common elsewhere. Moringa is one of the most nutrient-dense greens documented in the Okinawan diet and is sometimes called the "drumstick tree" in Southeast Asian cooking traditions that influenced Okinawan cuisine. Daily greens consumption, in whatever form, is one of the most consistent habits among Okinawan centenarians.
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🫙OkinawaPantry
Ohsawa
Organic Tamari Soy Sauce (Wheat-Free)
Tamari is the traditional soy sauce used in Japanese and Okinawan cooking, made with minimal or no wheat and a higher soy content than standard soy sauce. It provides a deeper umami flavor and is itself a fermented food, contributing to the gut-friendly profile of the Okinawan diet. Used as a finishing condiment, not a cooking base, in traditional preparation.
FermentedWheat-FreeUmami
Okinawan cooking relies on fermented condiments for flavor rather than salt or sugar. Tamari as a finishing sauce is a centuries-old practice that provides umami satisfaction with far less sodium than table salt delivers at equivalent flavor intensity. The fermentation process also creates beneficial organic acids and bioactive peptides not present in non-fermented soy products.
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🍄OkinawaProduce
Shirakiku
Dried Shiitake Mushrooms
Dried shiitake mushrooms are used in virtually every Okinawan broth and stir-fry. They are one of the richest plant sources of lentinan, a compound studied extensively in Japan for its immune-modulating and anti-tumor properties. Dried shiitakes rehydrated in warm water also produce an extremely mineral-rich dashi stock.
LentinanImmune SupportVitamin D
Shiitake mushrooms appear in the list of Okinawan longevity foods specifically cited by Blue Zones researchers. When sun-dried, shiitakes convert their ergosterol to vitamin D2, making them one of the few plant foods with meaningful vitamin D content. Placing dried shiitakes cap-side down in sunlight for 30 to 60 minutes before cooking dramatically increases their vitamin D content.
Edamame, young green soybeans, are a staple legume in the Loma Linda Adventist community and one of the few plant foods that qualifies as a complete protein. One cup provides 17g of protein alongside folate, vitamin K, and manganese. They are eaten as a snack, tossed into salads, or added to grain bowls.
Complete ProteinIsoflavonesFiber
Loma Linda Adventists who follow a vegan diet rely on a broad range of soy products to meet protein needs without animal foods. Edamame is the most whole, minimally processed form of soy available and retains all of the isoflavones and fiber that are partially lost in more processed soy products. The Adventist Health Study II found that regular consumption of whole soy foods was among the stronger dietary predictors of longevity in the study population.
Whole grain farro is a nutrient-dense ancient wheat used by Loma Linda Adventists as a base grain for bowls, salads, and soups. It has 6g of protein and 5g of fiber per serving and a nutty, chewy texture that replaces refined grains effectively. Farro's complex structure means it digests more slowly than modern wheat, producing a gentler blood sugar response.
Ancient GrainHigh ProteinHeart Health
Seventh-day Adventist dietary guidance emphasizes whole, unprocessed grains over refined ones. Farro is one of the most intact ancient grain options commercially available, with the bran and germ largely preserved. The Adventist Health Study consistently found whole grain consumption associated with better long-term health outcomes.
Apple cider vinegar with live cultures (the mother) is a fermented staple used by many Loma Linda Adventists as a daily tonic and salad dressing base. Some studies have linked regular vinegar consumption to modest improvements in post-meal blood sugar control. Bragg is one of the few brands that retains live cultures in every bottle.
Gut HealthBlood SugarFermented
Bragg's apple cider vinegar was founded by Paul Bragg, a pioneer in natural health whose work heavily influenced Seventh-day Adventist health education. The Bragg name is culturally significant in the Loma Linda community specifically. Daily vinegar consumption as a health tonic has roots in Adventist natural remedies going back over a century.
Sardines are the one fish recommended across multiple Blue Zone regions and explicitly cited by the Adventist Health Study as the fish associated with the longest lifespans among Adventist pescatarians. Wild Planet uses pole-and-line caught sardines with no bycatch and packs them in extra virgin olive oil, adding the polyphenol benefits of EVOO to the omega-3s of the fish.
Omega-3sVitamin DSustainable
The Adventist Health Study found that pescatarians, those who eat a plant-based diet with small amounts of fish, had the longest lifespans of all dietary groups studied, including vegans. Small, oily fish like sardines are specifically recommended because they are low on the food chain (low mercury), reproduce quickly (sustainable), and are among the richest sources of omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin D, and B12 in any food. They are also consumed in Sardinia and Ikaria.
Tempeh is fermented whole soybean cake, a more nutrient-dense and digestible form of soy than tofu. It has 20g of protein per serving and provides a firm, sliceable texture that absorbs marinades well. Fermentation by Rhizopus mold pre-digests the soy and increases the bioavailability of zinc, iron, and other minerals that can otherwise be blocked by phytic acid.
Complete ProteinProbioticFermented Soy
Tempeh originated in Indonesia but is widely consumed in the Loma Linda Adventist community as a protein anchor for plant-based meals. It is one of the most complete whole food protein sources in the plant kingdom and is made from fermented soybeans, combining the benefits of legumes with the benefits of fermentation.
Whole grain rye crispbread is one of the highest-fiber bread products commercially available, with GG Scandinavian Bran Crispbread delivering 5g of fiber per cracker. Loma Linda Adventists favor dense whole grain breads over soft processed varieties. Rye specifically has a lower glycemic index than wheat and a higher content of the lignan compounds linked to reduced hormone-driven cancer risk.
Highest Fiber BreadLow GlycemicGut Microbiome
Seventh-day Adventist dietary principles call for whole grain bread as a staple food. Crispbread made from whole rye is one of the most intact grain products available in US stores, with a lower glycemic index than wheat bread and higher fiber content. It is one of the most practical ways to shift toward the grain profile documented in the Loma Linda diet.
Masa harina is the lime-treated corn flour used to make traditional Nicoyan tortillas. The nixtamalization process, soaking corn in an alkaline solution of water and wood ash, dramatically increases calcium content and makes niacin bioavailable in a way raw corn does not provide. This is the authentic base for the three sisters diet that has sustained Nicoya's centenarians for 6,000 years.
NixtamalizedNiacin BioavailableMineral-Rich
Nixtamalization is one of the most important food technologies in human history, developed in Mesoamerica thousands of years ago. Populations that ate unnixtamalized corn developed pellagra (niacin deficiency) while those who nixtamalized did not. Nicoyan tortillas made fresh daily from masa harina represent one of the most complete carbohydrate sources in the Blue Zone diet, providing complex carbohydrates, calcium, niacin, and fiber in a single ingredient.
Recaito is a blend of cilantro, culantro, onion, garlic, and peppers used as the flavor base for virtually all Nicoyan bean and rice dishes. Cilantro and culantro are both rich in quercetin and other flavonoids. This is the most authentic way to season beans the way Nicoyan centenarians do, providing the herb foundation of the traditional Costa Rican diet.
Antioxidant HerbsAuthentic FlavorVersatile
Nicoyan cooking is defined by sofrito and recaito: fragrant herb and vegetable bases cooked into beans and rice that add not just flavor but significant antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds. Cilantro specifically has been studied for its ability to bind to heavy metals and support detoxification pathways. The daily habit of seasoning beans with fresh herbs is as important to the Nicoyan diet as the beans themselves.
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🍌NicoyaProduce
Chiquita
Dried Plantain Chips (Unsweetened)
Plantains are a daily staple in Nicoya, eaten boiled, fried, or dried. Green plantains are particularly high in resistant starch, which feeds beneficial gut bacteria and has been linked to improved insulin sensitivity and reduced colorectal cancer risk. Unsweetened dried plantain chips are the most practical shelf-stable form for adding this Blue Zone staple to a US diet.
Resistant StarchPotassiumEnergy
Fried sweet plantains (maduros) appear at nearly every Nicoyan meal. Green plantains used in soups and savory dishes provide a completely different nutritional profile, dominated by resistant starch rather than sugar. The combination of black beans and plantains eaten together is one of the most documented meal patterns among Nicoyan centenarians and provides complementary amino acids for complete plant protein.
Nicoyans drink rich, high-quality coffee grown in the Pacific coastal highlands adjacent to the Blue Zone. Multiple large studies link regular coffee consumption (2 to 4 cups daily) to reduced risk of Parkinson's disease, type 2 diabetes, liver disease, and all-cause mortality. Costa Rican coffee is grown at high altitude, which concentrates its antioxidant and chlorogenic acid content.
AntioxidantNeuroprotectiveHeart Health
Coffee is one of the few beverages consumed daily across multiple Blue Zones. In Nicoya, it is drunk at breakfast and again after lunch, always lightly sweetened and without cream. Chlorogenic acids in coffee, the primary antioxidant compounds, are present in higher concentrations in high-altitude beans like those from Costa Rica's central highlands. The Blue Zones organization specifically lists coffee as a recommended longevity beverage alongside water, tea, and red wine.
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🫘NicoyaLegumes
Goya
Dried Black-Eyed Peas
Black-eyed peas are consumed across Nicoya and the broader Central American longevity corridor. They are particularly high in folate, with one cup providing over 50 percent of the daily recommended intake, and are one of the fastest-cooking dried legumes available, softening fully in under an hour without soaking. A versatile alternative to black beans for adding legume variety.
FolateIronPrebiotic Fiber
Dietary variety among legume types is a consistent feature of Nicoyan eating. While black beans dominate, centenarians also eat pinto beans, red beans, and black-eyed peas regularly. Research suggests that eating a variety of legumes exposes the gut microbiome to a broader range of fermentable fibers than eating only one type, producing a more diverse and resilient microbial community.
Papaya is the most commonly eaten fresh fruit in Nicoya, available year-round in the tropical climate and eaten daily by centenarians. It is exceptionally rich in vitamin C, vitamin A, and papain, a proteolytic enzyme that aids protein digestion and reduces gut inflammation. A single small papaya provides more than double the daily vitamin C requirement.
Papain EnzymeVitamin CDigestive Health
Nicoyan centenarians eat fresh fruit, primarily papaya, mango, and guava, as snacks throughout the day rather than processed sweets. The habit of reaching for fresh local fruit as a default snack is one of the key behavioral patterns that keeps added sugar out of the Nicoyan diet. Papain specifically is one of the few food-derived digestive enzymes with documented clinical evidence for reducing digestive inflammation.
Black-eyed peas (mavromata) are one of the signature legumes of Ikaria, cooked with wild greens in the dish horta me mavromatika and eaten regularly throughout the week. They have a slightly earthier flavor than white beans and pair naturally with olive oil and lemon in the way Ikarian cooks have prepared them for centuries.
FolateAntioxidantPrebiotic Fiber
Ikarians eat a wider variety of legumes than almost any other Blue Zone population, rotating between lentils, chickpeas, white beans, and black-eyed peas throughout the week. This variety exposes the gut to multiple types of fermentable fiber and is thought to contribute to the remarkably low rates of inflammatory disease documented on the island. Black-eyed peas specifically are mentioned in traditional Ikarian recipes dating back centuries.
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🫘IkariaLegumes
Roland
Gigante Beans (Giant White Beans)
Giant white beans (gigantes) are one of the most iconic Greek legumes and a staple across Ikaria, slow-cooked in tomato sauce with olive oil and herbs. A single serving provides 15g of plant protein, 13g of fiber, and significant amounts of potassium and magnesium. The large size means they hold their texture beautifully in long-cooked stews and plaki dishes.
PrebioticHigh ProteinCreamy Texture
Gigante beans in plaki (baked in tomato and olive oil) is one of the dishes most closely associated with Ikarian longevity cooking. The slow cooking method used traditionally, baked for hours in a wood-fired oven, produces resistant starch as the beans cool and produces a sauce that concentrates the lycopene from tomatoes in the presence of olive oil for maximum absorption. This single dish embodies multiple Blue Zone dietary principles simultaneously.
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🌿IkariaPantry
Krinos
Greek Mountain Oregano (Rigani), Dried
Greek mountain oregano (rigani) is dramatically more potent than the mild Italian oregano sold in most US stores. It contains carvacrol and thymol at concentrations that have demonstrated antimicrobial and antifungal properties in clinical studies. Ikarians use it liberally on everything from salads to grilled fish, treating it as both a seasoning and a medicine.
CarvacrolAntimicrobialAntioxidant
Herbs in Ikaria are not garnishes. They are medicinal foods used in concentrated amounts every day. Greek mountain oregano specifically contains carvacrol at levels that have been shown to inhibit bacterial growth in laboratory studies. Growing and using herbs daily is a consistent feature of traditional Ikarian cooking.
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🍞IkariaGrains
Krinos
Whole Grain Barley Rusks (Paximadi)
Paximadi are twice-baked barley rusks that have been a staple bread substitute across Greek islands including Ikaria for centuries. They are extremely low in moisture (and therefore long-shelf-life), dense in fiber, and made from whole grain barley. Soaked briefly in water and topped with olive oil, tomato, and herbs, they form the base of the traditional dakos salad.
Twice-BakedGut-FriendlyLow Moisture
Paximadi became the bread of Greek islands because they keep for months without refrigeration, an essential quality for island life. But their slow-digesting whole barley base also means they feed gut bacteria more effectively than soft breads and produce a dramatically lower glycemic response. Ikarians eat paximadi with olive oil and tomato as a light meal several times a week, a dish that combines two of the most studied longevity foods in a single plate.
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🍵IkariaBeverages
Anavasi
Greek Mountain Tea (Sideritis / Shepherd's Tea)
Sideritis (ironwort or shepherd's tea) is the herbal tea most closely associated with Ikaria and has been the subject of published research examining its polyphenols and potential cognitive benefits. Its active compounds include luteolin, apigenin, and rosmarinic acid.
NeuroprotectiveAnti-InflammatoryBlood Pressure
This is not a general herbal tea recommendation. Sideritis is specifically and repeatedly documented in Blue Zones research on Ikaria as one of the beverages most strongly associated with the island's remarkably low dementia rates. Ikarians drink it warm in the afternoon, often with a small amount of honey, and the ritual itself provides a daily downshift moment that compounds with the tea's biological effects.
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Divina
Marinated Artichoke Hearts in Olive Oil
Artichokes are a traditional vegetable across Greek islands including Ikaria, eaten raw in salads, braised in olive oil, or marinated and served as part of a meze spread. They contain cynarine and silymarin, compounds studied for their hepatoprotective (liver-supporting) properties, and are one of the highest-prebiotic-fiber vegetables available. A half-cup serving of artichoke hearts provides more prebiotic inulin than most other vegetables combined.
CynarineLiver SupportPrebiotic
Artichokes have been cultivated in the Mediterranean for over 3,000 years and are deeply embedded in Ikarian cooking. Inulin, the prebiotic fiber in artichokes, selectively feeds Bifidobacterium species in the gut, the bacterial group most associated with healthy aging and reduced inflammatory disease. Marinated artichoke hearts in olive oil are the most convenient form and combine two Blue Zone foods in a single product.
Kalamata olives are the table olive of Greece and a daily food throughout Ikaria. They are brine-cured rather than lye-cured (unlike standard black olives), which preserves their hydroxytyrosol content, the primary antioxidant in olives and olive oil. A few kalamata olives with bread and olive oil is a standard Ikarian breakfast or light meal.
HydroxytyrosolHeart HealthFermented
Hydroxytyrosol is one of the most potent antioxidants found in the plant kingdom and is what gives extra virgin olive oil and properly cured olives their health reputation. Lye-curing (used for California black olives) destroys hydroxytyrosol completely. Brine-cured kalamatas retain it. Ikarians eat olives as a food in their own right, not just as a pizza topping, consuming them daily as part of their meze tradition.
Leafy greens are the single most universally consumed food category across all five Blue Zones. Blue Zones research highlights spinach, kale, beet tops, chard, and collards specifically. A daily serving of mixed dark leafy greens is one of the simplest dietary changes aligned with longevity eating.
FolateVitamin KLutein
Blue Zones researchers found that centenarians in every region ate leafy greens in some form every single day. In Sardinia, this is minestrone and braised greens. In Okinawa, stir-fried bitter melon and seaweed. In Ikaria, horta with olive oil and lemon. In Nicoya, shredded cabbage and herbs. In Loma Linda, salads and cooked spinach. The universal message is simple: eat greens daily, in whatever form works for you.
Tahini is a staple condiment across the Greek islands and is used as a dip, dressing base, and sauce throughout the Mediterranean Blue Zone diet. Sesame seeds are rich in sesamin and sesamolin, lignans linked to reduced blood pressure and cholesterol, and provide more calcium per serving than most dairy products. Tahini is one of the most calorie-dense and nutrient-dense plant foods available.
SesaminCalciumPlant Protein
Sesame and tahini appear in Ikarian cooking as both a sauce and a spread, used the way Americans use butter. Sesamin specifically has been studied for its effect on liver fat metabolism and has been shown in controlled trials to reduce LDL cholesterol. The traditional Ikarian preparation of tahini with lemon juice and garlic (tarator sauce) also combines multiple anti-inflammatory compounds into a single condiment.
Green lentils are the fastest-cooking legume in the Blue Zone pantry, requiring no soaking and softening fully in 20 to 25 minutes. They are a daily food in Ikaria, cooked simply with olive oil, garlic, and lemon, and provide the most folate of any legume alongside substantial iron and plant protein. One cup of cooked lentils provides 18g of protein and 16g of fiber.
Fastest Cooking LegumeIronFolate
Lentils are eaten across all five Blue Zone regions in different preparations. They require no soaking, cook quickly, and are among the cheapest protein sources per gram available anywhere. Blue Zones researchers specifically recommend lentils as the single easiest longevity food to incorporate for Americans because the barrier to entry is so low. The Ikarian preparation, simply cooked in olive oil with a squeeze of lemon, is one of the most studied traditional recipes in Mediterranean longevity research.
Organic Cannellini (White Kidney) Beans, No Salt Added
Cannellini beans are the white bean of the Mediterranean Blue Zone and appear in soups, stews, and salads throughout Ikaria and Sardinia. They are the highest in potassium of all common beans and have an exceptionally creamy texture that absorbs olive oil and herbs beautifully. A single serving provides more than a quarter of the daily potassium requirement.
PotassiumPrebioticHeart Health
White beans are specifically mentioned in Blue Zones research on both the Ikarian and Sardinian diets. Their high potassium content, critical for blood pressure regulation, is one of the reasons that Blue Zone populations maintain healthy cardiovascular function into their 90s despite eating relatively high-sodium traditional diets. The low-sodium canned version is essential for daily use.