Calories are calories but...

But.. Let's say, for example, in our cafeteria there are couple of options. You can get a granola bar or a banana for a snack. Now, a granola br has 90 calories but a banana has 130(they're massive). Besides the nutrition, I still think having a banana is so much better than having a granola bar, even on low cal diets. It fills me up more and for some mental reason I feel better.

What would you chose in a situation like that?
Oh and, I used to be on a diet bit not right now, just wondering what your opinions are.
«134

Replies

  • Mr_Knight
    Mr_Knight Posts: 9,532 Member
    You should choose the one that feels worse.

    Because the path to success is build on a foundation of masochism.

    Master Shifu told me so.
  • Brad592
    Brad592 Posts: 28 Member
    Man made rubbish vs naturally occuring food??
    Banana every time.
  • JesterMFP
    JesterMFP Posts: 3,596 Member
    Depends what kind of granola bar... flavours and whatnot. And what I feel like at the time. Also price, since I often have a pocket full of pennies in those situations.
  • You should choose the one that feels worse.

    Because the path to success is build on a foundation of masochism.

    Master Shifu told me so.
    Lol
  • unworthyservant12
    unworthyservant12 Posts: 14 Member
    I would choose the banana every time. For the natural nutrients it provides plus I find it has a more lasting fullness effect.
  • JesterMFP
    JesterMFP Posts: 3,596 Member
    I would choose the banana every time. For the natural nutrients it provides plus I find it has a more lasting fullness effect.
    Wait.. maybe I'm confused because "granola" isn't a term we hear much in this country, but I thought it was made of oats, nuts, honey and so on? No "natural" nutrients?
  • Yes, but granola bars are full of chemicals. Well, most of them. They usually add a ton of processed sugar too.
    Although, there is organic granola as a cereal, which is SO HARD to find!!
  • Brad592
    Brad592 Posts: 28 Member
    Wait.. maybe I'm confused because "granola" isn't a term we hear much in this country, but I thought it was made of oats, nuts, honey and so on? No "natural" nutrients?

    Yes, they are natural but also included some high processed ingredients (corn syrup) as well as additves and "natural flavours" whatever that is!!

    Banana ingredient list - Banana.
  • SezxyStef
    SezxyStef Posts: 15,267 Member
    what if it was homemade??? by Amish......ah ha...and Banana's are made up of no less than 7 ingrediants and since they have messed with banana in a lab to prevent seeds from growing in them and make them disease resistent...

    I would choose the one I liked the best. Prefer greek yogurt actually.

    a calorie is a calorie no buts...
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    banana has too much sugar...
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    Yes, but granola bars are full of chemicals. Well, most of them. They usually add a ton of processed sugar too.
    Although, there is organic granola as a cereal, which is SO HARD to find!!

    bananas have chemicals in them too...
  • Yes, but granola bars are full of chemicals. Well, most of them. They usually add a ton of processed sugar too.
    Although, there is organic granola as a cereal, which is SO HARD to find!!

    bananas have chemicals in them too...

    What do you mean? Like gmo's or something else?
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    Yes, but granola bars are full of chemicals. Well, most of them. They usually add a ton of processed sugar too.
    Although, there is organic granola as a cereal, which is SO HARD to find!!

    bananas have chemicals in them too...

    What do you mean? Like gmo's or something else?

    pretty much all food has chemicals in them..it is just the natural process as to how they become food….

    so saying you are not eating something because of "chemicals" is not really accurate….
  • Brad592
    Brad592 Posts: 28 Member
    a calorie is a calorie no buts...

    Yes buts!!!!

    Person 1 eats 2000 calories of chocloate and McDoanld's each day and Person 2 eats 2000 calories of meat, fuit and vegetables each day. Lets assume the net calories are the same each day.

    What do you think the end result will be?

    Sorry, but a calorie is not a calorie!
  • Yes, but granola bars are full of chemicals. Well, most of them. They usually add a ton of processed sugar too.
    Although, there is organic granola as a cereal, which is SO HARD to find!!

    bananas have chemicals in them too...

    What do you mean? Like gmo's or something else?

    pretty much all food has chemicals in them..it is just the natural process as to how they become food….

    so saying you are not eating something because of "chemicals" is not really accurate….

    Ok, so you think those chemicals are same with the ones are in fruit?
  • sisterlilbunny
    sisterlilbunny Posts: 686 Member
    *sneaks in before the poo storm...with popcorn* I think I may have seen this show already but I do usually enjoy it.
  • fruttibiscotti
    fruttibiscotti Posts: 986 Member


    Banana ingredient list - Banana.

    Funny
  • TanManZilla
    TanManZilla Posts: 8 Member
    Large Bananas will spike insulin high (high glycemic index), I'd not eat either of the 2 choices for snack... I advise keeping insulin levels down until post workouts and or night. Natural levels of insulin rise during workouts, and at night/sleep until about 2hrs after wake. Good luck
  • a calorie is a calorie no buts...

    Yes buts!!!!

    Person 1 eats 2000 calories of chocloate and McDoanld's each day and Person 2 eats 2000 calories of meat, fuit and vegetables each day. Lets assume the net calories are the same each day.

    What do you think the end result will be?

    Sorry, but a calorie is not a calorie!
    I think that there IS a but, like there are fats that gets into your body as bodyfat and fats that help you burn fat. If you eat an avocado every morning with your breakfast, it is highly unlikely that for you to gain weight but if you eat Burger King fries before you sleep every night, it IS going to make you fat. This is like another version of what the person above me said lol;)
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    a calorie is a calorie no buts...

    Yes buts!!!!

    Person 1 eats 2000 calories of chocloate and McDoanld's each day and Person 2 eats 2000 calories of meat, fuit and vegetables each day. Lets assume the net calories are the same each day.

    What do you think the end result will be?

    Sorry, but a calorie is not a calorie!

    assuming their maintenance level is both 2000 then they will both not gain weight…

    so yes a calorie is a calorie, which is energy ….
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    a calorie is a calorie no buts...

    Yes buts!!!!

    Person 1 eats 2000 calories of chocloate and McDoanld's each day and Person 2 eats 2000 calories of meat, fuit and vegetables each day. Lets assume the net calories are the same each day.

    What do you think the end result will be?

    Sorry, but a calorie is not a calorie!
    I think that there IS a but, like there are fats that gets into your body as bodyfat and fats that help you burn fat. If you eat an avocado every morning with your breakfast, it is highly unlikely that for you to gain weight but if you eat Burger King fries before you sleep every night, it IS going to make you fat. This is like another version of what the person above me said lol;)

    ummm no …

    overeating makes you fat…not eating BK fries before you go to sleep ….
  • kgeyser
    kgeyser Posts: 22,505 Member
    *sneaks in before the poo storm...with popcorn* I think I may have seen this show already but I do usually enjoy it.

    *sits down with M&Ms*
  • FoxyLifter
    FoxyLifter Posts: 965 Member
    LMAO @ all the broscience in this thread.

    *waits for gifs of popcorn eating and/or people grabbing chairs*
  • tigersword
    tigersword Posts: 8,059 Member
    Yes, but granola bars are full of chemicals. Well, most of them. They usually add a ton of processed sugar too.
    Although, there is organic granola as a cereal, which is SO HARD to find!!
    If you think granola bars of full of chemicals, I'd hate for you to find out how many chemicals are in a banana (a couple thousand.)
  • zipnguyen
    zipnguyen Posts: 990 Member
    in4 comments
  • bumblebreezy91
    bumblebreezy91 Posts: 520 Member
    A calorie is a calorie. Always. No buts, not even one. I don't care how you feel about someone eating McDonald's or eating "clean," it doesn't change the facts. Sure, you'll probably feel better eating more whole, fresh foods, but if you log it, go for it. A deficit is what you need to lose weight, every time, always.

    And I'd eat the granola bar (because I eat bananas for breakfast), knowing that this is the chemical makeup of the typical American granola bar:

    550 mg of Malic acid, 16 mg of citric acid, 500 ug of oxalic acid, 310 ug of salicylic acid and 3 mg of purines, 85.3 grams of water, 0.3 grams of protein, 0.4 grams of lipids, 11.8 grams of carbohydrates, 0.6 grams of organic acids and 2.3 grams of fiber. 3 milligrams(mg) of sodium, 145 mg of potassium, 6 mg of magnesium, 7 mg of calcium, 65 micrograms(ug) of manganese, 480 ug of iron, 100 ug of copper, 120 ug of zinc, 12 mg of phosphorus, 2 mg of chloride, 7 ug of fluoride, 2 ug of iodine and 1-6 ug of selenium, 45 ug of carotene, 490 ug of vitamin E, 0-5 ug of vitamin K, 35 ug of vitamin B1, 30 ug of vitamin B2, 300 ug of nicotinamide, 100 ug of pantothenic acid, 45 ug of vitamin B6, 1-8 ug of biotin, 7 ug of frolic acid and 12 mg of vitamin C, 16 mg of Leucine, 15 mg Lysine, 12 mg of Valine and 10 mg of Isoleucine. 2210 mg of glucose, 6040 mg of fructose, 2470 of sucrose, 600 mg of starch, 510 mg of sorbit. Its lipids are 50 mg of palmitic acid, 10 mg of stearic acid, 20 mg of oleic acid, 100 mg of linolic acid, 20 mg of linoleic acid.

    Oh, wait. That's the makeup of an apple. Oops. All those scary-looking chemical names, I figured it would be something so super dangerous for me to eat.

    Also, it shouldn't matter to YOU that I had a 250 calorie snack wrap from McDonald's (that had less fat and less sodium than my homemade sandwich) twice last month and then had a huge salad and a half slice of pie at Perkins over this last weekend. I'm losing weight because I'm at a calorie deficit. I'm not telling you to eat the two snack wraps or the salad and pie, so to attempt to dictate my diet by saying we "shouldn't" eat certain foods or we should all eat a certain way when I haven't even tried to impose my habits on you is rude and unnecessary. I just had bloodwork done in December; I have a clean bill of health, my cholesterol is better than my doctor's.

    Your example of the person eating 1200 calories of chocolate & McDonald's vs. the person eating 1200 calories of "clean" foods is ridiculous. They both lose the same amount as long as they're at a deficit. You're confusing "amount of calories" with "quality of calories" and that's a different subject. 1200 calories of "good" quality foods vs. 1200 calories of "bad" quality foods looks the same for the deficit. If I tell you one person ate 1200 calories and lost 50 pounds and then told you a second person did the same thing, you would not know, by those numbers alone, if one person ate "good" quality foods and the other ate and mix of "good" and "bad" quality foods, would you? No, you wouldn't.

    Go over to the success forum and tell them calories are different depending on what you eat and that "junk"/fast/processed food hinders progress, that should be fun considering a lot of them ate those "bad" foods in smaller portions and managed to lose a massive amount of weight.

    I love how the topic was "calories are calories but..." and then immediately followed by "a calorie is not always a calorie, because some foods are better for you!"
  • bumblebreezy91
    bumblebreezy91 Posts: 520 Member
    Wait.. maybe I'm confused because "granola" isn't a term we hear much in this country, but I thought it was made of oats, nuts, honey and so on? No "natural" nutrients?

    Yes, they are natural but also included some high processed ingredients (corn syrup) as well as additves and "natural flavours" whatever that is!!

    Banana ingredient list - Banana.

    :laugh:
  • meshashesha2012
    meshashesha2012 Posts: 8,329 Member
    i wouldnt choose either. i'd get a boiled egg from the salad bar are and some fresh berries.

    both the granola and banana option are probably going to be too sweet tasting to me . i prefer savory or tart snacks
  • Yes, but granola bars are full of chemicals. Well, most of them. They usually add a ton of processed sugar too.
    Although, there is organic granola as a cereal, which is SO HARD to find!!
    If you think granola bars of full of chemicals, I'd hate for you to find out how many chemicals are in a banana (a couple thousand.)
    Do bananas have high fructose corn syrup? No. Do they have those weird colourings? No. Do they have Citric Acid? I can go on like that forever.
    I truly respect people's opinions, but you cannot say that the chemical people put in a candy bar is the same with banana. It is so harmless with fruits, it is so not with candy bars.
  • I'm hardly an expert but I would think if you ate at a deficit, regardless of what you actually ate, you would lose weight. Just as if you ate at a maintenance level, you would maintain your weight.

    But I'm pretty sure the person who ate all their calories as crap would be less healthy (on the inside, anyway) than the person who ate natural, unprocessed calories.

    Just my personal opinion (which is always open to change).