The Vikings are remembered for their fearless voyages and epic raids, but their kitchen habits are now sailing into modern wellness conversations. The so-called “Viking diet” or “Nordic diet” is making a comeback, inspired by what Norse people ate between the 8th and 11th centuries. While it may seem like the ultimate clean-eating blueprint, health experts caution that replicating it exactly could be risky in today’s world.
The advice comes from registered dietitian and food blogger Lauren Harris-Pincus, who spoke to Fox News Digital about the diet’s benefits, pitfalls, and ways to adapt it wisely.
What Vikings actually ate?
The Vikings’ meals were shaped by geography, climate, and survival needs. Harris-Pincus explains that their diet was rooted in “clean, sustainable foods,” resembling modern wellness trends such as the Mediterranean diet, but with a heavier emphasis on animal products.
Staples included:
The hidden health hazards of eating like a Viking
While the diet’s reliance on whole, minimally processed foods is appealing, Harris-Pincus warns against copying it in full. “It’s not important, wise or practical to follow the Viking diet exactly in our current food environment,” she says.
Potential downsides include:
Harris-Pincus suggests taking inspiration from the Viking diet without committing to its more problematic elements. This means:
The Viking diet offers a snapshot of clean, resourceful eating rooted in nature and necessity. But unlike the Norse warriors who braved icy seas, most modern people don’t need to fuel up on high-fat meats or salted fish to survive.
Instead, experts recommend borrowing the best parts — seasonal produce, hearty grains, quality proteins — while skipping the parts that clash with today’s health needs. In other words, you can eat like a Viking, but it’s best to do it with a 21st-century mindset.
The advice comes from registered dietitian and food blogger Lauren Harris-Pincus, who spoke to Fox News Digital about the diet’s benefits, pitfalls, and ways to adapt it wisely.
What Vikings actually ate?
The Vikings’ meals were shaped by geography, climate, and survival needs. Harris-Pincus explains that their diet was rooted in “clean, sustainable foods,” resembling modern wellness trends such as the Mediterranean diet, but with a heavier emphasis on animal products.
Staples included:
- Vegetables: onions, garlic, cabbage, carrots, leeks, turnips, parsnips
- Nuts and fruits: walnuts, hazelnuts, bilberries, raspberries, wild apples, plums
- Meat and seafood: cattle, pigs, sheep, ducks, geese, salmon, mackerel, herring, and even whale or seal meat
- Grains and dairy: rye, barley, oats, buckwheat, milk, butter, cheese
- Extras: eggs, salt, spices, and drinks like beer and mead
The hidden health hazards of eating like a Viking
While the diet’s reliance on whole, minimally processed foods is appealing, Harris-Pincus warns against copying it in full. “It’s not important, wise or practical to follow the Viking diet exactly in our current food environment,” she says.
Potential downsides include:
- High saturated fat: Vikings relied on fatty meats to survive harsh winters, but modern lifestyles don’t require such heavy fat intake. Too much saturated fat raises cardiovascular risk.
- Excess sodium: Preserving food with salt was essential in Norse times, but it can lead to hypertension today.
- Alcohol dependence: Mead and beer were everyday staples then, but high alcohol consumption can undermine long-term health.
Harris-Pincus suggests taking inspiration from the Viking diet without committing to its more problematic elements. This means:
- Emphasising vegetables, fruits, nuts, and whole grains
- Limiting highly processed foods high in sugar, fat, and sodium
- Reducing red meat and replacing some animal fats with plant-based alternatives
- Cooking at home to control ingredients and portion sizes
The Viking diet offers a snapshot of clean, resourceful eating rooted in nature and necessity. But unlike the Norse warriors who braved icy seas, most modern people don’t need to fuel up on high-fat meats or salted fish to survive.
Instead, experts recommend borrowing the best parts — seasonal produce, hearty grains, quality proteins — while skipping the parts that clash with today’s health needs. In other words, you can eat like a Viking, but it’s best to do it with a 21st-century mindset.
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