Processed Sugar
Replies
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I feel like a lot of the people here would have an exploded head if they saw the offerings at an ultra marathon aid station. Gummy bears, pizza, REAL DEVIL COCA-COLA.
And we all know how fat and out of shape ultra marathoners are.
Considering the fact people had just ran a marathon and they needed to replenish their glucose levels for both energy and their muscles, it wouldn't surprise me... Now, keep that up at breakfast, lunch, afternoon snack, dinner, late nigh snack and see what happens.
Well, right. That's why the word is "moderation"
But your original question was "is there ever a time when processed sugar is beneficial?"
The answer is clearly yes.0 -
I feel like a lot of the people here would have an exploded head if they saw the offerings at an ultra marathon aid station. Gummy bears, pizza, REAL DEVIL COCA-COLA.
And we all know how fat and out of shape ultra marathoners are.
Considering the fact people had just ran a marathon and they needed to replenish their glucose levels for both energy and their muscles, it wouldn't surprise me... Now, keep that up at breakfast, lunch, afternoon snack, dinner, late nigh snack and see what happens.
Well, right. That's why the word is "moderation"
But your original question was "is there ever a time when processed sugar is beneficial?"
The answer is clearly yes.
Exactly. Sitting on the couch all day? A Snickers bar and a Coke is not the best choice. Running an ultra? Best thing you could do for yourself. The food isn't good or bad, its just a collection of nutrients that is a good or bad choice depending on the situation.0 -
I feel like a lot of the people here would have an exploded head if they saw the offerings at an ultra marathon aid station. Gummy bears, pizza, REAL DEVIL COCA-COLA.
And we all know how fat and out of shape ultra marathoners are.
Considering the fact people had just ran a marathon and they needed to replenish their glucose levels for both energy and their muscles, it wouldn't surprise me... Now, keep that up at breakfast, lunch, afternoon snack, dinner, late nigh snack and see what happens.
Well, right. That's why the word is "moderation"
But your original question was "is there ever a time when processed sugar is beneficial?"
The answer is clearly yes.
Here is what my "bag" looks like for a long cycling ride. (2) 90 Cal Coca-Cola cans - 50g, (4) Clif Bar Energy Bloks - 48 grams, and a couple Clif Bars - 40-50 grams, and Skratch Labs Exercise Hydration Mix (3 servings in 2 bottles) - 60g.
I consume about 300-400 cals per hour and most of that is sugar. It gives me energy to fuel my ride which is definitely a nutritional benefit in my opinion.0 -
If there was a situation where you would want to spike insulin, that would be a benefit, I guess. Whether or not you consider that a nutritional benefit is another story.
It's also a benefit to me if I want to meet my macros quickly and conveniently instead of gorging myself on foods that are low in processed sugar.
It's all about context and goals.0 -
I just realized something. WTF is wrong with me? I can barely afford produce. Really 'barely' is synonymous with can't really but try anyway. If every one of you happily munching on cookies, cake, and bread with corn syrup hidden in it start switching to produce prices will get even higher and I'll be totally screwed.
Sugar is good for you! White sugar is the best! Snort it! Cook it! Mainline it! Chow down! But stay away from my strawberries!
:laugh:0 -
If there was a situation where you would want to spike insulin, that would be a benefit, I guess. Whether or not you consider that a nutritional benefit is another story.
It's also a benefit to me if I want to meet my macros quickly and conveniently instead of gorging myself on foods that are low in processed sugar.
It's all about context and goals.
Insulin spikes trigger muscle growth.0 -
If there was a situation where you would want to spike insulin, that would be a benefit, I guess. Whether or not you consider that a nutritional benefit is another story.
It's also a benefit to me if I want to meet my macros quickly and conveniently instead of gorging myself on foods that are low in processed sugar.
It's all about context and goals.
Insulin spikes trigger muscle growth.
Those are the lines along which I was thinking, knowing that insulin is anabolic. Beneficial? Completely subjective.0 -
I think it is important, whether some people call it addiction or bad habits, that sugar is what people will get attached to the most, and it is the first thing people will look for when emotionally unstable. So, while it is true that moderation is key, sugar is probably the one food people can't control themselves about, and will be the cause of gaining extra weight and even developing health issues if not controlled in time.
So... my steak attachment... Where does that fit in?
I had the same thought.
Also, I can control myself about sugar. You know how people can tell if they are controlling themselves about sugar? They can count calories and see if they are exceeding the calories they intended to eat because they eat more sugar than they meant to. I see no reason to preemptively decide that everyone will lose control due to sugar and cut it out.
Most people probably eat too much sugar for the same reason they eat too many calories from other foods--they don't actually watch what they eat and just go by what tastes good.0 -
Molasses by itself is good for you, but when it's mixed with white processed sugar, it really doesn't make a lot of difference. You don't get enough of the molasses benefits in the brown sugar.
So a tablespoon of molasses mixed with brown sugar does not give you the same amount of nutrients as a tablespoon of molasses by itself?
Do you even math, brah?
I believe she's saying that there's no actual benefit from subbing brown sugar for white sugar in everything. In the amounts talked about, the little bits of extra stuff you would get from brown sugar would be minimal and thus not a reason to ditch white. I haven't run the comparison (I'm mostly annoyed by the focus on WHITE sugar for other reasons, namely the weird idea that brown is less processed), but it seems plausible.0 -
I just realized something. WTF is wrong with me? I can barely afford produce. Really 'barely' is synonymous with can't really but try anyway. If every one of you happily munching on cookies, cake, and bread with corn syrup hidden in it start switching to produce prices will get even higher and I'll be totally screwed.
Sugar is good for you! White sugar is the best! Snort it! Cook it! Mainline it! Chow down! But stay away from my strawberries!
Um, one can eat ice cream and also eat produce, you know.
My ice cream is usually more expensive than the produce too, but maybe that's because this is farm country or something. If I can ever find my ice cream maker, I might even make my own ice cream with produce. (I'll probably add a little sugar, though, because I'm wild that way.)
Sadly, in the winter the locally-grown produce isn't so available (because snow and all that) but produce still seems to be available at quite reasonable prices.
Besides, given that this is a weird cold summer, I'm still picking strawberries from my garden. Just getting far fewer tomatoes than usual.0 -
If there was a situation where you would want to spike insulin, that would be a benefit, I guess. Whether or not you consider that a nutritional benefit is another story.
It's also a benefit to me if I want to meet my macros quickly and conveniently instead of gorging myself on foods that are low in processed sugar.
It's all about context and goals.
Insulin spikes trigger muscle growth.
Those are the lines along which I was thinking, knowing that insulin is anabolic. Beneficial? Completely subjective.
Sorry. I read it as "insulin spikes are BAD" Too much MFP for me0 -
I just realized something. WTF is wrong with me? I can barely afford produce. Really 'barely' is synonymous with can't really but try anyway. If every one of you happily munching on cookies, cake, and bread with corn syrup hidden in it start switching to produce prices will get even higher and I'll be totally screwed.
Sugar is good for you! White sugar is the best! Snort it! Cook it! Mainline it! Chow down! But stay away from my strawberries!
Um, one can eat ice cream and also eat produce, you know.
My ice cream is usually more expensive than the produce too, but maybe that's because this is farm country or something. If I can ever find my ice cream maker, I might even make my own ice cream with produce. (I'll probably add a little sugar, though, because I'm wild that way.)
Sadly, in the winter the locally-grown produce isn't so available (because snow and all that) but produce still seems to be available at quite reasonable prices.
Besides, given that this is a weird cold summer, I'm still picking strawberries from my garden. Just getting far fewer tomatoes than usual.
Eat it at your own risk. Fruit is poisonous. Just google poisonous fruit, you'll get all kind of pictures that look exactly like those berries you should pass by in the store. The ones I'm standing over protectively, snarling. It's to keep anyone from getting sick, I tell ya! Stay away!0 -
I just realized something. WTF is wrong with me? I can barely afford produce. Really 'barely' is synonymous with can't really but try anyway. If every one of you happily munching on cookies, cake, and bread with corn syrup hidden in it start switching to produce prices will get even higher and I'll be totally screwed.
Sugar is good for you! White sugar is the best! Snort it! Cook it! Mainline it! Chow down! But stay away from my strawberries!
Um, one can eat ice cream and also eat produce, you know.
My ice cream is usually more expensive than the produce too, but maybe that's because this is farm country or something. If I can ever find my ice cream maker, I might even make my own ice cream with produce. (I'll probably add a little sugar, though, because I'm wild that way.)
Sadly, in the winter the locally-grown produce isn't so available (because snow and all that) but produce still seems to be available at quite reasonable prices.
Besides, given that this is a weird cold summer, I'm still picking strawberries from my garden. Just getting far fewer tomatoes than usual.
Eat it at your own risk. Fruit is poisonous. Just google poisonous fruit, you'll get all kind of pictures that look exactly like those berries you should pass by in the store. The ones I'm standing over protectively, snarling. It's to keep anyone from getting sick, I tell ya! Stay away!
I just did a Google search. You wouldn't believe what I found!0 -
I just realized something. WTF is wrong with me? I can barely afford produce. Really 'barely' is synonymous with can't really but try anyway. If every one of you happily munching on cookies, cake, and bread with corn syrup hidden in it start switching to produce prices will get even higher and I'll be totally screwed.
Sugar is good for you! White sugar is the best! Snort it! Cook it! Mainline it! Chow down! But stay away from my strawberries!
Um, one can eat ice cream and also eat produce, you know.
My ice cream is usually more expensive than the produce too, but maybe that's because this is farm country or something. If I can ever find my ice cream maker, I might even make my own ice cream with produce. (I'll probably add a little sugar, though, because I'm wild that way.)
Sadly, in the winter the locally-grown produce isn't so available (because snow and all that) but produce still seems to be available at quite reasonable prices.
Besides, given that this is a weird cold summer, I'm still picking strawberries from my garden. Just getting far fewer tomatoes than usual.
Eat it at your own risk. Fruit is poisonous. Just google poisonous fruit, you'll get all kind of pictures that look exactly like those berries you should pass by in the store. The ones I'm standing over protectively, snarling. It's to keep anyone from getting sick, I tell ya! Stay away!
I just did a Google search. You wouldn't believe what I found!
Yup. Fruit leads to a prolonged, horrendous death full of foaming at the mouth, convulsions, and agonized regret. I'm just going to take these to the cashier now and buy them, then dispose of them in a safe, concrete-lined pit where they can't do any more damage.
The perfectly safe, tasty cookies are on Aisle 3.0 -
The question is, if a starving man only had water to survive on while his twin brother had water and sugar, which one will die first? Some scientists supposedly did a study on mice regarding a similar issue, feeding one over the other sugar water. Guess what they found!?!?
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-08/daily-soda-habit-impairs-evolutionary-fitness-mice-study-finds0 -
The question is, if a starving man only had water to survive on while his twin brother had water and sugar, which one will die first? Some scientists supposedly did a study on mice regarding a similar issue, feeding one over the other sugar water. Guess what they found!?!?
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-08/daily-soda-habit-impairs-evolutionary-fitness-mice-study-finds
Can you post actual study?0 -
No. I never said anything about this study being real or not; it's just interesting to think about this stuff.0
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The question is, if a starving man only had water to survive on while his twin brother had water and sugar, which one will die first? Some scientists supposedly did a study on mice regarding a similar issue, feeding one over the other sugar water. Guess what they found!?!?
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-08/daily-soda-habit-impairs-evolutionary-fitness-mice-study-finds0 -
The question is, if a starving man only had water to survive on while his twin brother had water and sugar, which one will die first? Some scientists supposedly did a study on mice regarding a similar issue, feeding one over the other sugar water. Guess what they found!?!?
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-08/daily-soda-habit-impairs-evolutionary-fitness-mice-study-finds
True, it wasn't. Although it was interesting. If it's the one I read when I googled the keywords, researchers took wild mice and raised them to the mousy equivalent of teenage years. Half were on sugar water as well as balanced food, the other half were fed cornstarch water and a balanced mouse diet.
Then they turned both groups loose to compete in a controlled wildish environment with wild raised mice. The sugar water mice did much worse. The females died younger. The males didn't die younger but fathered less children.
However, I don't remember it saying they controlled for weight. If they didn't, then MFP sugar eaters will rightly argue that it can't apply to them because the human sugar eaters are controlling for weight through calorie counting and treats in moderation.0 -
The question is, if a starving man only had water to survive on while his twin brother had water and sugar, which one will die first? Some scientists supposedly did a study on mice regarding a similar issue, feeding one over the other sugar water. Guess what they found!?!?
http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-08/daily-soda-habit-impairs-evolutionary-fitness-mice-study-finds
True, it wasn't. Although it was interesting. If it's the one I read when I googled the keywords, researchers took wild mice and raised them to the mousy equivalent of teenage years. Half were on sugar water as well as balanced food, the other half were fed cornstarch water and a balanced mouse diet.
Then they turned both groups loose to compete in a controlled wildish environment with wild raised mice. The sugar water mice did much worse. The females died younger. The males didn't die younger but fathered less children.
However, I don't remember it saying they controlled for weight. If they didn't, then MFP sugar eaters will rightly argue that it can't apply to them because the human sugar eaters are controlling for weight through calorie counting and treats in moderation.
It would be good to see the entire study to see if sugar was on top of what they ate, and what amount of sugar they ate as a portion of their diet. Even at the same calorie level, sugar making up too much of the diet would effect the ability to obtain required nutrients.
And of course, even if it does hold true for mice, we should be very careful extrapolating this to humans.0 -
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Because maple syrup, mollasses, etc have energy and nutrients, and are not the endproducts of large scale environmental destruction. Drive out of Miami sometime when they are burning cane. Stevia adds pleasure with no calories. Bees do not generally bleach their "products", I think you might be tilting towards sophistry. Putting honey in a bottle in no way compares with monoculture, and factory processing. :flowerforyou:0
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If the only benefit is energy or taste, then certainly maple syrup, honey, stevia or agave would be better.
Why?0 -
Because maple syrup, mollasses, etc have energy and nutrients, and are not the endproducts of large scale environmental destruction. Drive out of Miami sometime when they are burning cane. Stevia adds pleasure with no calories. Bees do not generally bleach their "products", I think you might be tilting towards sophistry. Putting honey in a bottle in no way compares with monoculture, and factory processing. :flowerforyou:
Sugar has energy. That's been covered. The environmental impacts are a separate topic and more complicated than you acknowledge here. Otherwise, look at the specifics of the cookie example--the idea that sugar makes it bad for you and maple syrup not is based on nothing beyond a rather superstitious idea about one being processed and the other not. Nutritionally and calorie wise there's no real difference. Eat beyond moderation and both are bad ideas.
The inclusion of agave nectar in the usual list of supposedly more "natural" so better alternatives is one obvious problem with this way of compartmentalizing things.0 -
Because maple syrup, mollasses, etc have energy and nutrients, and are not the endproducts of large scale environmental destruction. Drive out of Miami sometime when they are burning cane.
Sorry to rain on your parade but molasses comes out of the same process as sugar - two products of the same establishment.
Don't judge the entire sugar industry by the 3rd world practices of the Southern USA either ;-)0 -
Well said sir.0
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Shipwrecked sailors who ate and drank nothing but sugar and rum for nine days surely went through some of this trauma; the tales they had to tell created a big public relations problem for the sugar pushers. This incident occurred when a vessel carrying a cargo of sugar was shipwrecked in 1793. The five surviving sailors were finally rescued after being marooned for nine days. They were in a wasted condition due to starvation, having consumed nothing but sugar and rum. The eminent French physiologist F. Magendie was inspired by that incident to conduct a series of experiments with animals, the results of which he published in 1816. In the experiments, he fed dogs a diet of sugar or olive oil and water. All the dogs wasted and died.
The shipwrecked sailors and the French physiologist's experimental dogs proved the same point. As a steady diet, sugar is worse than nothing. Plain water can keep you alive for quite some time. Sugar and water can kill you. Humans [and animals] are "unable to subsist on a diet of sugar".
So, the major benefit to sugar is that you will die quicker. Enjoy!
lolwut?
ETA: I like to link where I extracted quotes from....
http://www.globalhealingcenter.com/sugar-problem/refined-sugar-the-sweetest-poison-of-all
and lol at that article.
Any time you write lolwut it is code for. . .do not pay attention to this poster. And thanks for the link we all need a laugh now and again.0 -
Because maple syrup, mollasses, etc have energy and nutrients, and are not the endproducts of large scale environmental destruction. Drive out of Miami sometime when they are burning cane.
Sorry to rain on your parade but molasses comes out of the same process as sugar - two products of the same establishment.
Don't judge the entire sugar industry by the 3rd world practices of the Southern USA either ;-)
And then there is the fact that the majority of sugar comes from sugar beets, not cane.0 -
Of course no benefits. People just love sweet stuff.0
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