As someone who has experimented for years with various purported longevity diets, I was interested in what the epidemiology of supercentenarians could tell us, if anything. All the sophisticated theories in the world cannot compete with real data.
Here's what I did: I went to this Wikipedia list of verified supercentenarians, the average age of whom being around 115, and looked at their respective Wikipedia articles. I did not use other sources, in order to avoid bias and ensure at least some degree of public corroboration. If I found something that said "X attributed her longevity to eating a donut for breakfast every day", then I put "donut" in my spreadsheet. If someone else said "I'm sure it's because I eat several donuts a week that I look so young", I then incremented the donut count to 2. On the other hand, I would ignore statements like "X loves donuts" or "X worked in a donut shop" because they provide no clue as to whether or not donuts were a regular part of X's diet.
Next, if there was some highly aberrant data, I made a note of it, for example, "X ate 7 donuts for dinner every day".
Finally, for all people mentioned in the sheet, I made a note of their dementia status to the extent possible, based on the information provided.
Compiling the list was as much art as science, but I think the numbers are revealing nonetheless and resistant to differences of opinion over any one supercentenarian's dietary comments.
You can view the sheet here.
It goes without saying that raw organic foods are superior to those sprayed with pesticides or adulterated with various artificial chemicals. (The one exception is probably peanuts, which are better sprayed with fungicide because otherwise the aflatoxin threat is far worse still. No supercentenarians I read about reported anything to do with them, anyway. Yeah, sorry, I love the taste of peanuts, too!) With that in mind, and considering that industrial food only became popular in the latter portion of most of these peoples' lives, those with the lowest dementia rates ate, in no particular order: eggs, herring, orange juice, red wine, chocolate, olive oil, potatoes, sweet potatoes, coffee, and various vegetables. Milk and bacon were multiply reported supercentenarian foods, but were associated with inferior mental status in later life. Steamed pork would appear to be a superior alternative to bacon, but the evidence is scant.
Insofar as dementia is concerned, this result is rather unremarkable and reinforces the notion that current thinking in vegan and ketogenic nutrition theory is reasonably well founded, despite being at opposite poles of the spectrum. Apart from the obvious polyphenol and antioxidant content of some of these food items, there is some congruity with estalished research, namely: (1) eggs, herring, and the soy lecithin in chocolate are all rich (phosphatidyl)choline sources; (2) olive oil consumption and modest red wine drinking and are cornerstones of the Mediterranean diet; (3) juice and coffee consumption have been associated with a lower risk of dementia; and (4) sweet potatoes are a staple of the traditional Okinawan diet, much moreso than fish, calorie for calorie.
On the other hand, we have something of a reproducibility problem. Red wine is now loaded with sulphites, except for the few organic brands. Olive oil tends to be an ad hoc mixture of various international sources, but for the pricier brands. Chocolate has become tainted with lead and cadmium (which is why I prefer 80% dark Endangered Species, but there are surely other clean sources). Herring, especially from the North Sea or the Sea of Japan, is going to be tainted with mercury and perhaps radioactive cesium. And purple sweet potatoes are difficult to obtain in most cities, although Asian special stores may carry them, perhaps from polluted third world farms. At least, organic vegetables are still easily obtained in some countries, as are free range organic eggs, preferably not grain-fed.
I would be remiss not to emphasize the importance of other nonnutritional aspects of supercentenarianism, chiefly, happiness, calmness, and a sense of social purpose. Moreover, hormesis is no stranger to this group: light smoking and light drinking, even of hard liquor, featured prominently among subjects. The trick, of course, is to be able to stop after a single cigarette a day or half a glass of red wine. Most people would fail that test.
I may update the list on occasion, but I have no specific plan to do so. I have provided it in the interest of public analysis and debate.
Edited by resveratrol_guy, 19 March 2016 - 05:54 AM.