Gwyneth Paltrow Describing What She Eats In A Day Has Been Called Out By Dieticians For How Intensely Restrictive It Is

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Warning: Discussion of restrictive eating.

Gwyneth Paltrow has been dubbed an "almond mom" for her food habits, which one registered dietician said "screams disordered eating."

Gwyneth outside wearing a cardigan, several necklaces, and bold red lipstick
Rb / GC Images / Getty Images

For context, a recent clip of Gwyneth speaking on The Art of Being Well podcast with Dr. Will Cole began to gain traction on TikTok due to her description of her daily "wellness routine."

The gist of it is that Gwyneth will have an early paleo dinner, fast until midday (save for some coffee), exercise for an hour, then for lunch typically have some soup — which is often just bone broth.

Gwyneth saying, "I usually eat something about 12"

TikTokers began stitching the clip, dubbing Gwyneth an "almond mom" (i.e. an older woman who's obsessed with diet culture) or simply criticized her for promoting under-eating and diet culture.

Gwyneth speaking on the podcast

So I reached out to Sammi Haber Brondo, a registered dietician based in New York, to get her take on things. "I think in general, this is just very, very little food and actually not that healthy-sounding at all," Sammi began in a phone call with BuzzFeed.

  Axelle / FilmMagic
Axelle / FilmMagic

"In the morning, [she has] coffee, celery juice, lemon water — those aren't meals, those are beverages. Even when she has lunch, and she said she has green soup and bone broth, that's also barely food, those are liquid, those are beverages. At night, she has just a really vegetable-heavy meal. This is really restrictive eating."

Gwyneth smiles as she stands against a floral backdrop for an event for Sex, Love & Goop

As for Gwyneth's full claims about "detoxing" and "methylation," Sammi replied, "She was trying to use [methylation] to say she can't detox well, but at the end of the day, our kidneys and liver do all of our detoxing. Unless you have really severe kidney or liver disease, your kidneys and liver will detox for you."

<div><p>"She's just kind of using a big word to seem like she knows what she's talking about," Sammi added.</p></div><span> Brian Stukes / Getty Images</span>

"She's just kind of using a big word to seem like she knows what she's talking about," Sammi added.

Brian Stukes / Getty Images

Ultimately, Sammi sees Gwyneth's words, and other content like it, as a real potential cause of harm for others who view it as a way to get "healthy" or try to emulate Gwyneth's looks.

<div><p>"Even if she's just saying, 'This is how I eat,' the bottom line is [that with] anyone who says how they eat on social media, you [will] have at least one person, if not many, many more, who will use that as an example of, 'Oh, this is what I should do,'" Sammi said.</p></div><span> Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images</span>

"Even if she's just saying, 'This is how I eat,' the bottom line is [that with] anyone who says how they eat on social media, you [will] have at least one person, if not many, many more, who will use that as an example of, 'Oh, this is what I should do,'" Sammi said.

Pascal Le Segretain / Getty Images

I further spoke to Kathleen Meehan, a registered dietitian based in LA. "My concern as an eating disorder dietitian is that there's a lot of behaviors in here that read pretty disordered," she began.

<div><p>"I see [her] highlighting low-calorie eating, even though she's not explicitly saying that. She's normalizing things like fasting and restriction, and worrying about things like detoxing. That feels pretty problematic to me."</p></div><span> Bryan Bedder / Getty Images for Goop</span>

"I see [her] highlighting low-calorie eating, even though she's not explicitly saying that. She's normalizing things like fasting and restriction, and worrying about things like detoxing. That feels pretty problematic to me."

Bryan Bedder / Getty Images for Goop

"One thing that really struck me [while] listening to her interview is that she works really hard on feeling well. She does all of these different things that, by the way, are almost inaccessible to most people," Kathleen continued. "I feel like it's in relation to needing to eat more — when we're not eating enough, we don't feel well. ... Something I see with people that I work with is, like, we often don't realize that eating inadequately really impacts how we feel until we're on the other side."

As for Gwyneth's insistence that she is not eliminating

Gwyneth has yet to address the TikTok criticism.

The National Eating Disorders Association helpline is 1-800-931-2237; for 24/7 crisis support, text “NEDA” to 741741.