Want to Go Pescatarian? Start With This 7-Day Meal Plan

A healthy pescatarian meal plan includes mostly plant-based foods along with a few servings of fish.
Image Credit: gbh007/iStock/GettyImages

You may have heard that plant-based eating is the new trend and it's the type of eating health professionals everywhere are cheering about. But plant-based eating doesn't mean you have to make the commitment to becoming a vegan, and you don't even have to be a full-on vegetarian.

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The pescatarian diet is a plant-based diet that gets extra protein and nutrition from two to three servings of fish each week. Here's what to know about the diet and a meal plan to get you started.

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What Is the Pescatarian Diet?

The pescatarian diet, sometimes called pesco-vegetarian, is a flexible way to adopt a plant-based diet that's brimming with health benefits.

Here's how it measures up against other similar diets:

  • Vegan:‌ No animal or animal-derived products whatsoever — that means no meat, dairy, eggs or honey
  • Lacto-ovo vegetarian:‌ Avoids meat of all types, but includes milk (lacto) and eggs (ovo)
  • Ovo vegetarian:‌ Includes eggs as the only animal-based protein
  • Lacto vegetarian:‌ Includes dairy, such as milk, cheese and yogurt, but avoids eggs and meat
  • Pescatarian:‌ Vegetarians who eat fish and may also choose to include eggs and dairy

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As you can see, there are a ton of options if you want to switch to a plant-based diet. The pescatarian eating pattern can be as rigid or as flexible as you like.

Pescatarian Diet Foods

A balanced pescatarian diet is one that includes a wide variety of foods from all food groups. In order to reap all of the health benefits, stick with whole foods, limit how much you eat away from home and load up on plants.

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Foods You Should Eat

  • Fruits:‌ Bananas, berries, oranges, kiwi, melons and so many more!
  • Vegetables:‌ Broccoli, carrots, potatoes, sweet potatoes, cauliflower, greens
  • Nuts:‌ Pecans, cashews, peanuts, almonds and nut butters
  • Olive oil
  • Whole grains:‌ Brown rice, quinoa, whole-wheat bread, oats, popcorn
  • Legumes:‌ All beans and lentils
  • Seafood:‌ Eat fish two to three times per week and stick with low-mercury fish such as salmon, tuna, shrimp, sardines and oysters
  • Dairy:‌ Milk, cottage cheese, cheese, yogurt
  • Eggs

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Foods You Should Limit

Moderation is key on the pescatarian diet. There are many foods that you should only eat every once in a while, but few foods that you should avoid completely. It only makes sense if you're going pescatarian for health reasons that you limit foods that may not be benefitting your health.

  • Processed, plant-based meat alternatives:‌ These can be high in sodium and fillers
  • Added sugar:‌ Candy, cookies, cakes — stick with the American Heart Association recommendation of no more than 6 teaspoons of added sugar per day for women and no more than 9 teaspoons per day for men
  • Highly-processed (aka "junk") foods:‌ Chips and foods like it should be eaten in moderation for all diets
  • Alcohol:‌ No more than one drink per day for women and two for men, per the AHA

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Foods You Should Avoid

When you eat meat-free, you naturally take out processed and cured meats, which should be limited in an omnivore diet anyway. Reading food labels and ingredient lists should become a habit to ensure you're sticking with your new plant-based lifestyle.

  • Meat:‌ Poultry, beef, pork and meat from all animals
  • Any shelf-stable foods with hydrogenated oils (trans fat):‌ Crackers, boxed pastries and frozen pizza are a few examples (check ingredients list to see if it contains hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated oils — even if the nutrition label says 0 grams trans fat, the food can still have 0.05 grams of trans fat per servings, according to labeling rules from the Food and Drug Administration)

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Tuna is a heart-healthy fish that's also easy to prepare.
Image Credit: DebbiSmirnoff/E+/GettyImages

Why Go Pescatarian?

When switching to a pescatarian diet, you get all the health benefits that a vegetarian enjoys, including a reduced risk for:

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  • Heart disease:‌ According to an August 2019 review published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, people who ate more plants and less meat had a lower risk of heart disease
  • Type 2 diabetes:‌ Per a September 2018 review published in Current Diabetes Reports‌, all types of vegetarian diets reduced the risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
  • High blood pressure:‌ According to a May 2017 article published in the Journal of Geriatric Cardiology‌, vegans and vegetarians had lower blood pressure overall and a significantly reduced risk of hypertension (high blood pressure). This is pretty big news, considering more than 100 million U.S. adults have high blood pressure, according to the AHA.

Plant-based eating also aids in the reduction of body fat (aka weight loss), according to a November 2019 analysis published in Nutrients. That's because this type of eating pattern generally leads to a reduction in calories overall, improved gut health and increased insulin sensitivity.

If environmental concerns are a reason you want to switch to plant-based eating, there is some research to suggest that a meat-free diet has benefits in that area, too. According to a June 2014 study in Climatic Change, meat-eaters had higher greenhouse gas emissions than pescatarians.

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Another reason you might find it tempting to switch to plant-based eating with a few servings of fish each week is your bank account. The mainstay of the pescatarian diet is still plant-based foods, such as beans, lentils and plants, which are much more inexpensive than beef and poultry. Two servings of fish each week is still relatively cheaper than eating meat each night. Save money on seafood by purchasing a mix of fresh, frozen and vacuum-packed seafood, such as tuna packets.

Your Go-To 7-Day Pescatarian Diet Meal Plan

Monday

  • Breakfast:‌ Start the morning with this fiber-rich Meusli Breakfast Bowl
  • Lunch:‌ This Egg Salad swaps out the mayo for yogurt without missing any flavor
  • Dinner:‌ Your week should begin with the good dose of omega-3s in this Baked Salmon

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Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

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