Encyclopedia of Diets - A Guide to Health and Nutrition

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Cabbage soup diet
Definition

The cabbage soup diet is a quick weight loss pro-
gram intended to be followed for seven days. The cen-
terpiece of the diet is a recipe for cabbage soup, which
the dieter may consume in unlimited quantities. In
addition to the cabbage soup, there are certain other
foods the dieter must eat on specific days during the
week. There are several versions of the diet, most of
which promise a 10-17 lb weight loss during the week.


The cabbage soup diet has a number of other
names:


TWA Stewardess Diet


Model’s Diet


Dolly Parton Diet


Military Cabbage Soup Diet


Mayo Clinic Diet


Sacred Heart Hospital Diet
Miami Heart Institute Diet


Spokane Diet


Fat Burning Diet


T. J.’s Miracle Soup Diet


The Skinny


Origins

The cabbage soup diet may be the oldest fad diet
still in use; it seems to resurface with a new name every
10 to 15 years. It has been described by some historians
of popular culture as a good example of an urban
legend—a type of modern folklore passed from person
to person via word of mouth, photocopies, or e-mail.
Urban legends are often stories or anecdotes, but some
can be called ‘‘widely accepted misinformation.’’


No one seems to know when the cabbage soup
diet was first formulated or the identity of its origina-


tor. According to the American Dietetic Association’s
timeline offad diets, the cabbage soup diet originated
around 1950, but it may date back even earlier. There
is a recipe for ‘‘Doughboy Cabbage Soup’’ dating back
to World War I (1914–1918), when American soldiers
fighting in France had few other vegetables available
and eating cabbage offered protection against scurvy,
a deficiency disease caused by inadequatevitamin Cin
the diet. The name ‘‘Military Cabbage Soup Diet’’ is
likely derived from the World War I soup recipe,
although that early recipe lacked the tomatoes, bouil-
lon cubes, and other seasonings included in recent
versions of the diet.
After the 1950s, the cabbage soup diet was revived
in the early 1980s not only as the Dolly Parton Diet
but also as the Trans World Airlines (TWA) Steward-
ess Diet and the Model’s Diet. It acquired these names
because of the belief that celebrities, models, and flight
attendants had to meet rigorous periodic weight
check-ins in order to keep their jobs. The cabbage
soup diet was passed around from person to person
in the form of photocopies during this period. It often
claimed that the dieter would lose 10-17 lb during the
first week either because cabbage supposedly has no
calories at all or because it contains a ‘‘miracle fat-
burning’’ compound.
The cabbage soup diet reappeared in the mid-
1990s, when fax machines and the Internet made it
easy for people to transmit copies of the diet to friends
and workplace colleagues. The diet was also published
in magazines such asCosmopolitanandGentlemen’s
Quarterly(nowGQ) in 1995. The diet was attributed
to health associations as well as the cardiology depart-
ments of several hospitals and medical centers in this
period. These institutions supposedly gave the diet to
overweight patients preparing for heart surgery to help
them to lose weight quickly before their operations.
Thus, the diet acquired such names as the Sacred
Heart dietor the Spokane diet (from the names of
hospitals in Brussels, Belgium, Montreal, Quebec, and
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