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"Natural foods" vs "others"
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callsitlikeiseeit wrote: »you know, i think everyone does what works best for them or what they prefer or what makes them feel good - for whatever reason.
you could kill a chicken in your yard and once you stick it over your firepit made with sticks and fire from lightening .... its processed.
i eat the way i eat, because i PREFER to. fresh veg and fruit. very little canned or frozen. meats (that im positive WERE frozen, and almost always are once they get to my house). i buy most of my bread, but even when i make it, once it hits that oven .... processed.
i dont buy many canned soups or items because i simply dont like them. i like to control my food and whats in it. and with prepackaged things, you dont have that control. if someone else wants to use it - awesome. i truly do not care. lol
live and let live.
and doritos are *kitten* good!!!
You may be getting fewer nutrients from "fresh" fruits and veg than from canned or frozen, unless they are local produce.5 -
Minor nutritional differences found between fresh, frozen, and canned. http://www.fruitandvegetable.ucdavis.edu/files/217102.pdf6
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well I would rather use all natural foods to bring my bio metrics into a healthy reading instead of popping meds...you cant do that with Doritos or Cheetos or or...get the picture. It does matter.
I had some steel cut oats with almonds and blue berries and two eggs and a low sodium V8 for breakfast.
I had some grilled chicken over quinoa and peas and carrots for lunch.
I have a small individual sized bag of hot Cheetos that I'm planning to have as a snack later.
I also have an apple and some peanut butter for later as well.
For dinner tonight I'm grilling salmon and roasting asparagus and some sweet potatoes.
This is pretty much consistent with how I eat most of the time...my biometrics were bad when I was overweight...they're optimal now, despite my hot Cheetos. Pretty sure my little bag of hot Cheetos doesn't negate the rest of my day.
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I don't think some "other foods" are horrible for many people to eat. a few doritos won't hurt most people but a few cigarettes don't hurt most people either... but you are probably better off skipping both.
Oh, I love the "probably better off" game. Let's play!
You are PBO not driving because of the fumes.
You are PBO not working because of stress.
You are PBO staying out of your house because that is where many accidents happen.
You are PBO staying out of the sun because of skin cancer.
You are PBO not eating because food is a choking hazard.
Wasn't that fun!!
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well I would rather use all natural foods to bring my bio metrics into a healthy reading instead of popping meds...you cant do that with Doritos or Cheetos or or...get the picture. It does matter.
So anybody who eats Doritos or Cheetos eats NOTHING BUT Doritos and Cheetos? Do you really think most people who are making an effort to get healthy don't also eat lean meats, vegetables, fruits, grains, etc., maybe with Doritos and Cheetos (or whatever other food one is choosing to demonize) in moderation, within the context of an overall balanced diet?
This binary, "either/or" reasoning always puzzles me. It's as if there are only two possibilities - gorge yourself on junk food all day every day, or eat nothing but the purest, most wholesome foods at all times. As if there could be no reasonable middle ground. And assuming that if you eat so much as ONE "unhealthy" meal/snack, your entire body is poisoned, diseased and rapidly spiraling toward death.
We're talking about different things here.
Again, the OP didn't ask "is eating the occasional junk food detrimental to your health in the context of an overall balanced diet?".
The way he worded his post made it sound as if he sees no difference between 'natural' and 'unnatural' foods at all and therefore they're entirely equal and it's a false dichotomy to separate them and pointless to choose one over the other.
That's an entirely different argument, and I will stand by my opinion that they are NOT equal.
Again going back to caffeine and alcohol (both natural substances mind you, but that does not make them any healthier) - can you consume both within the context of a healthy diet and experience no ill effects? Of course. Does that make either of them good for your health and completely without *some* degree of risk? No. Little is confirmed with studies, it seems to go back and forth, but the overall common sense view is they are likely to increase your risk of cancer among other diseases. The pleasure I and others derive from consuming these makes it worth it to take that risk, so be it. But I would not look down on someone who chose not to consume them at all for these reasons as being ill-informed, elitist or fear-mongering.
Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.21 -
nettiklive wrote: »I answered: what makes it unnatural is the fact that it is, unnatural. Because Yellow #42 does not exist in nature, last I knew,
Yellow #42 is also known as yellow ochre, an iron oxide (Fe2O3.H2O) found in clays in many parts of the world, and used tens of thousands of years ago by Cro-Magnons and Neanderthals to make cave paintings and presumably adorn their bodies. That's about as "natural" as you can get.
There are chemicals concocted in labs that are totally innocuous.
There are chemicals found in nature that are deadly poisonous.
Just because humans invented something doesn't make it evil.
Just because Mother Nature (or Gaia, or whatever you choose to call it) makes something doesn't make it good.34 -
nettiklive wrote: »Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.
Hasty generalization
No health benefits? Zero? You can't really believe that can you?
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nettiklive wrote: »well I would rather use all natural foods to bring my bio metrics into a healthy reading instead of popping meds...you cant do that with Doritos or Cheetos or or...get the picture. It does matter.
So anybody who eats Doritos or Cheetos eats NOTHING BUT Doritos and Cheetos? Do you really think most people who are making an effort to get healthy don't also eat lean meats, vegetables, fruits, grains, etc., maybe with Doritos and Cheetos (or whatever other food one is choosing to demonize) in moderation, within the context of an overall balanced diet?
This binary, "either/or" reasoning always puzzles me. It's as if there are only two possibilities - gorge yourself on junk food all day every day, or eat nothing but the purest, most wholesome foods at all times. As if there could be no reasonable middle ground. And assuming that if you eat so much as ONE "unhealthy" meal/snack, your entire body is poisoned, diseased and rapidly spiraling toward death.
We're talking about different things here.
Again, the OP didn't ask "is eating the occasional junk food detrimental to your health in the context of an overall balanced diet?".
The way he worded his post made it sound as if he sees no difference between 'natural' and 'unnatural' foods at all and therefore they're entirely equal and it's a false dichotomy to separate them and pointless to choose one over the other.
That's an entirely different argument, and I will stand by my opinion that they are NOT equal.
Again going back to caffeine and alcohol (both natural substances mind you, but that does not make them any healthier) - can you consume both within the context of a healthy diet and experience no ill effects? Of course. Does that make either of them good for your health and completely without *some* degree of risk? No. Little is confirmed with studies, it seems to go back and forth, but the overall common sense view is they are likely to increase your risk of cancer among other diseases. The pleasure I and others derive from consuming these makes it worth it to take that risk, so be it. But I would not look down on someone who chose not to consume them at all for these reasons as being ill-informed, elitist or fear-mongering.
Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.
I'm disappointed that you didn't choose to answer the hypothetical question posed in a post before that. Let me re-state it for you:
Three people are placed on an island. One gets only unlimited broccoli and carrots. One gets only unlimited beans and peas. One gets only unlimited Big Macs. All three get unlimited water. Who lives the longest?
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nettiklive wrote: »WinoGelato wrote: »nettiklive wrote: »Keto_Vampire wrote: »No FDA definition of natural...it's marketing BS
https://fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/GuidanceDocumentsRegulatoryInformation/LabelingNutrition/ucm456090.htm
I don't need definitions or labels to tell me if a product is natural or not... I can read an ingredient list.
"Marketing BS" is dyeing macaroni with fake orange coloring pretending it's cheese. Or "cream" filled cakes that are shelf-stable and don't expire for years. Or selling 'healthy' yogurt where they replace the fat with a metric ton of sugar and thickeners because they're afraid people won't buy the yogurt if it actually tastes like, you know, yogurt. There is no good reason to add artificial colors or flavors to anything, except marketing.
Things like Amy's frozen meals ARE in fact, made from only natural ingredients. Kraft dinner is not. I do try to cook most meals from scratch but I do stock convenience foods like that on hand for those rushed times, and when I buy those, I read labels and choose those without artificial additives in the ingredient list. I like TJ's for that reason, as all their frozen and convenience meals have natural ingredients only. I choose yogurt that has nothing but milk and cultures, and bread that has only ingredients one would use at home. I keep thinking I should just bake it myself but I'm a bit intimidated by the process.
You want to call it elitism, go ahead, though that's a really weird label for someone's dietary choices. I thought it was just sensible eating. Certainly every one I know in real life tries to avoid these types of foods and make good choices as often as possible. I don't 'buy into' a lot of trends in today's diets such as going gluten or dairy-free because I don't agree with all the claims, but I wouldn't call someone elitist or stupid because they've made that choice. Same as I wouldn't someone who chooses not to consume alcohol or caffeine. It's a personal choice and though it's not mine, I can understand their rationale for it.
This thread just seems weird to me and really twilight-zonish, to read people claiming that natural ingredients have no advantage over man-made ones. I just thought it was a given that avoiding artificial ingredients was a good thing
And this is why conversations like these are pointless. Everyone purporting to subscribe to this superior way of eating - whether you call it “clean” or “natural” or “Whole Foods” or “nothing processed” has their own arbitrary definition that they adhere to but when asked about some of the statements they make about how they eat, it turns out that there are all sorts of exceptions that really aren’t different than how most people eat. The self proclaimed clean eaters always have whey protein powder or go to Chipotle for lunch. The nothing processed folks always say “well you know what I meant” when asked about Greek yogurt or steel cut oats or dried pasta.
It’s very unlikely that any individual is growing, harvesting, slaughtering, and processing all of their own foods. We are busy human beings and most of us are living in a world of.many conveniences. It is “natural” for today’s world to rely on these conveniences, and anyone claiming otherwise is likely using some arbitrary and subjective food classification system. But yes, there’s an air of superiority and elitism inherent in all of these statements. “Everyone I know I’m real life tries to avoid these foods and make good choices as much as possible “. How is that not laden with judgement toward people who do eat a weight watchers meal, a fat free yogurt, a Diet Coke, a kraft dinner and hot dogs on occasion with my kids?
And to your last point, I didn’t actually see anyone saying there was no advantage to eating “natural” foods over artificial... but it’s a weird false choice to project here because it completely ignores, as most of these discussions do, the concept of context and dosage. In the context of a calorie appropriate and overall balanced diet, how is eating a serving of Oreos going to actively harm me?
Well, the original post had no mention of context or dosage.
The question (that I now understand was rhetorical and not an actual discussion, silly me) was:
So all you out there, what makes these "other" food "unnatural"
I answered: what makes it unnatural is the fact that it is, unnatural. Because Yellow #42 does not exist in nature, last I knew,
As for: "How is that not laden with judgement toward people who do eat a weight watchers meal, a fat free yogurt, a Diet Coke, a kraft dinner and hot dogs on occasion with my kids? "
Um, no that wasn't 'laden with a judgment', that was a simple statement of fact. Truly, every single adult I know tries to comprise their family's diets of mainly real, natural foods (let's not pick at words here, we all know what that means). "As much as possible' means just that - there can be pizza nights and parties and halloween candy and fast food on the road and whatever else. However everyone understands these for what they are - not particularly healthy choices that are inferior to 'real'/whole/natural/ whatever you wanna call it foods, again you know what I mean. And understand that they are not equal in healthfulness and should not make up the bulk of someone's diet. All this particularly when it comes to young kids, imo.
But again, the OP made no mention of any of this, he implied that there is no real difference at all between 'natural' and 'non-natural' foods.
But if you want to talk judgement. I do judge, not the people who consume these things but the industry that created them. Convenience is one thing. Promotion of artificially-laden junk molded together from modified corn starch, cheap grease, sugar, salt, and neon coloring, especially targeted to kids, is another. If you ask me, and call me elitist all you want - NO ONE needs to eat that crap, no one, and it should not even be sold as food. The only reason it was is because corporations found a gold mine. I'm incredibly happy that this crap seems to be getting pushed out more and more as people finally demand better food and so many more good quality products are becoming easily available. And when you have good quality food, you don't need to mask it with salt, sugar, and fake flavoring. You know what tastes like cheddar cheese? Cheddar cheese. Boil some pasta, plop in butter and sprinkle some on, voila. Takes the same amount of effort and time.
Okay I'm off my soapbox now. I'm not ripping anyone's cheetos out of their hands. I just don't get the love. So many other delicious, 'real' foods exist to indulge in as a treat. Bake some cookies with real butter, so much better than Oreos. Flame away now
Corporations sell us exactly what we the public, as a collective, vote for with our dollars. Most people buy what they personally consider tasty, convenient, affordable and generally desirable.
If we voted economically for shelf-stable, organic, non-GMO, gluten-free roasted Brussels sprouts in convenient, eco-friendly single-serve packs, the corporations would be falling over themselves to sell them to us as cheaply and conveniently as they could manage.
But we don't. Evolution wired us to like fats, sugar, salt; and to eat to excess when food is plentiful. The foods that respond to that are therefore ubiquitous.
Corporations exist to make money, not to be our mommies and daddies and take good care of us. It's our job to identify and act on our own self-interest. (I'm not arguing that this is the perfect society; I'm saying it's the one we happen to live in, in the wealthier first-world countries at least.)
In MBA-school marketing classes, the very clear message was that the magic key to profit is to identify what people really, really want - not what they think they ought to want, not what they say they want, not what they actually need (as if someone should or could decide that for them) - but what they really want. Then you advertise it as being what they think they ought to want. This is the whole story behind crispy chicken salad (with the Newman's Own dressing that adds a halo of charitable giving), and "healthy" granola bars (whole grains! heart-healthy nuts!) that have about the same ingredients, taste, and macro profile as traditional candy bars.
Furthermore, we are the corporations, too: Shareholders (perhaps through intermediaries like banks, mutual funds, pension plans), and employees.
Walt Kelly, in Pogo, had it right: "We have met the enemy, and he is us."
Conspiracy theories are one way to deny collective responsibility.25 -
Does anybody else REALLY want Cheetos now... or is it just me?16
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nettiklive wrote: »well I would rather use all natural foods to bring my bio metrics into a healthy reading instead of popping meds...you cant do that with Doritos or Cheetos or or...get the picture. It does matter.
So anybody who eats Doritos or Cheetos eats NOTHING BUT Doritos and Cheetos? Do you really think most people who are making an effort to get healthy don't also eat lean meats, vegetables, fruits, grains, etc., maybe with Doritos and Cheetos (or whatever other food one is choosing to demonize) in moderation, within the context of an overall balanced diet?
This binary, "either/or" reasoning always puzzles me. It's as if there are only two possibilities - gorge yourself on junk food all day every day, or eat nothing but the purest, most wholesome foods at all times. As if there could be no reasonable middle ground. And assuming that if you eat so much as ONE "unhealthy" meal/snack, your entire body is poisoned, diseased and rapidly spiraling toward death.
We're talking about different things here.
Again, the OP didn't ask "is eating the occasional junk food detrimental to your health in the context of an overall balanced diet?".
The way he worded his post made it sound as if he sees no difference between 'natural' and 'unnatural' foods at all and therefore they're entirely equal and it's a false dichotomy to separate them and pointless to choose one over the other.
That's an entirely different argument, and I will stand by my opinion that they are NOT equal.
Again going back to caffeine and alcohol (both natural substances mind you, but that does not make them any healthier) - can you consume both within the context of a healthy diet and experience no ill effects? Of course. Does that make either of them good for your health and completely without *some* degree of risk? No. Little is confirmed with studies, it seems to go back and forth, but the overall common sense view is they are likely to increase your risk of cancer among other diseases. The pleasure I and others derive from consuming these makes it worth it to take that risk, so be it. But I would not look down on someone who chose not to consume them at all for these reasons as being ill-informed, elitist or fear-mongering.
Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.
If I conflated "high quality" with "natural," I would probably also decide I preferred "natural" foods.
I don't see why a pastry, high quality or not, is more natural than a corn chip.
Can a pastry be good or bad, flavor-wise? Yes. But so can a corn chip.
If I conflated "contains nutrients" with "natural," I would probably also decide I preferred "natural" foods. But again, there are natural foods that aren't that nutrient-rich and some "non-natural" foods that are very nutrient-rich.
So this seems to be a case of framing the issue in a way that defines a certain outcome.
You're saying you prefer foods that you find delicious and deciding everything within that category is therefore "natural." But looking at the foods you include, I don't know if I agree with your categories or what you've decided to exclude.18 -
nettiklive wrote: »Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.
Hasty generalization
No health benefits? Zero? You can't really believe that can you?
Please enlighten me then. Exactly what health benefits are provided by artificial flavorings, artificial color, artificial sweeteners, or artificial preservatives?17 -
Salt is a natural preservative that is also needed by the body. It is added to many processed foods to extend shelf life and to repel nasty bacteria. Pickles for instance. We all need salt....in moderation.12
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nettiklive wrote: »well I would rather use all natural foods to bring my bio metrics into a healthy reading instead of popping meds...you cant do that with Doritos or Cheetos or or...get the picture. It does matter.
So anybody who eats Doritos or Cheetos eats NOTHING BUT Doritos and Cheetos? Do you really think most people who are making an effort to get healthy don't also eat lean meats, vegetables, fruits, grains, etc., maybe with Doritos and Cheetos (or whatever other food one is choosing to demonize) in moderation, within the context of an overall balanced diet?
This binary, "either/or" reasoning always puzzles me. It's as if there are only two possibilities - gorge yourself on junk food all day every day, or eat nothing but the purest, most wholesome foods at all times. As if there could be no reasonable middle ground. And assuming that if you eat so much as ONE "unhealthy" meal/snack, your entire body is poisoned, diseased and rapidly spiraling toward death.
We're talking about different things here.
Again, the OP didn't ask "is eating the occasional junk food detrimental to your health in the context of an overall balanced diet?".
The way he worded his post made it sound as if he sees no difference between 'natural' and 'unnatural' foods at all and therefore they're entirely equal and it's a false dichotomy to separate them and pointless to choose one over the other.
That's an entirely different argument, and I will stand by my opinion that they are NOT equal.
Again going back to caffeine and alcohol (both natural substances mind you, but that does not make them any healthier) - can you consume both within the context of a healthy diet and experience no ill effects? Of course. Does that make either of them good for your health and completely without *some* degree of risk? No. Little is confirmed with studies, it seems to go back and forth, but the overall common sense view is they are likely to increase your risk of cancer among other diseases. The pleasure I and others derive from consuming these makes it worth it to take that risk, so be it. But I would not look down on someone who chose not to consume them at all for these reasons as being ill-informed, elitist or fear-mongering.
Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.
I'm disappointed that you didn't choose to answer the hypothetical question posed in a post before that. Let me re-state it for you:
Three people are placed on an island. One gets only unlimited broccoli and carrots. One gets only unlimited beans and peas. One gets only unlimited Big Macs. All three get unlimited water. Who lives the longest?
I didn't bother because this is a stupid question. Of course the big mac guy would live longer (provided he hopefully isn't prone to high cholesterol or heart disease or already overweight and won't keel over from a heart attack), because he is the only one you've deemed to provide with a complete protein, fat, and carb source in this scenario. That however doesn't mean he would live up to his projected lifespan he could have if he was eating a normal diet. Now if you throw in some organic chicken breasts for the broccoli and bean people, they very well will outlive big mac guy.
In any case, what does this ridiculous scenario have to do with normal life where I'm assuming we aren't forced to choose between broccoli and big macs to survive? People in developing countries eat flat "breads" they mix together from powdered clay and water to stave off unbearable starvation. Does that mean clay is a perfectly fine food choice we should all incorporate into our diets?18 -
I know this is overly simplified but how about just noticing how you feel after you eat something? I love soft drinks and rice crispy treats but feel like crap when I eat them. Speaking for myself, I feel better when I eat pesticide free lettuce, carrots, oranges, etc and worse when I eat fried Chicfila. I think my body works better when I eat green beans instead of bacon and nitrates. I am grateful to live where I can grab a not as healthy prepackaged peanut butter and cracker pack and a diet coke when I don't plan ahead. Were all in this together. I don't feel quite as hopeless or overwhelmed with weight issues knowing we all have a common goal regardless of how we get there.
Please tell me where you obtain these mythical 'pesticide free' veggies and fruits? You do realize that organic does NOT mean pesticide free? All organic means is that they are regulated as to which pesticides can be used...
Are you implying that the organophosphate pesticide Monitor mentioned in this article is as safe as Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt), which is approved for organic gardening?2 -
nettiklive wrote: »nettiklive wrote: »Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.
Hasty generalization
No health benefits? Zero? You can't really believe that can you?
Please enlighten me then. Exactly what health benefits are provided by artificial flavorings, artificial color, artificial sweeteners, or artificial preservatives?
If I drink milk fortified with vitamin D or eat bread baked with flour enriched with B vitamins, my body will be able to use those vitamins. If I eat yogurt that has some artificial coloring or flavor, my body will still process the calcium and protein in the yogurt. If I am able to eat vegetables, fruits, and other foods all through the year due to preservation, I get the macro- and micronutrients contained in those foods.
You're approaching this as if adding certain things to a food cancels out everything else about a food and that just isn't true.
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nettiklive wrote: »If we're talking strictly weight loss and calories, of course it doesn't matter.
If we're talking health... I personally believe that any foods or ingredients that are created entirely artificially, ie. do not occur in nature in any form, cannot be good for you. I'm not a microbiologist so I won't claim to know exactly how they affect your body, but it sort of makes sense that we are not meant to eat non-food substances - and these are essentially what those are. For me personally, it grosses me out to be eating these, we don't consume them or buy them in our family aside from rare occasions.
For me, that includes things such as artificial flavorings, artificial colors, artificial preservatives, high corn fructose syrup, artificial sweeteners. Some of the foods we almost never buy or eat are soda, artificially colored/flavored candy/cookies/snacks, junk food like Doritos/ cheetos etc (all-natural tortilla or potato chips very rarely), Wonderbread-style bread, fat free yogurts with added starch/sugar/gelatin, American processed cheese slices, and most fast food chains, among others.
I stand by the opinion that all that stuff is not food, and should never have been created or marketed as food to begin with. I think it is silly to argue that, I don't know, chicken or broccoli is no better than a pack of Hot Cheetos. Artificial ingredients have no real nutrition or benefits to the body (unless artificially 'enriched' and that's questionable) and were only created as palate-pleasing profit-makers and nothing more.
I agree with you.
For the record, I've never been to the FoodBabe website or watched "What the Health" or things of that ilk.14 -
As I sit and eat my Reese Pieces with peanut butter in them - I noticed that the person defending "good" vs "bad" food with their opinion is getting loads of "likes" and "woo" on here.
This makes me believe that knowledge still isn't spreading. I have started to feel like people prefer "magical foods" over facts because magical foods don't need calorie counting- they would just automatically get you at the "perfect" body.
For example- any time in my family I talk to them about weight loss- first asked question is - what should I stop eating or what foods should I not consume? you notice -they don't ask if you can teach me how to measure my caloric balance so I can eat in deficit to lose weight.
It's just the "good" food "bad" food mentality- that people have been ingrained in us and it's much easier to go with it instead of re-learning everything. I, myself had a hard time accepting that "it's ok- I can even eat pizza and still lose weight if I stay in deficit" It's ok to eat pizza and still be healthy because pizza also has protein, carbs and fats.
Ah! Science. I'm so grateful to have people from all kind of mind set here - I get to learn so many new things.10 -
nettiklive wrote: »...Of course the big mac guy would live longer...nettiklive wrote: »...In any case, what does this ridiculous scenario have to do with normal life where I'm assuming we aren't forced to choose between broccoli and big macs to survive?...29
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janejellyroll wrote: »nettiklive wrote: »well I would rather use all natural foods to bring my bio metrics into a healthy reading instead of popping meds...you cant do that with Doritos or Cheetos or or...get the picture. It does matter.
So anybody who eats Doritos or Cheetos eats NOTHING BUT Doritos and Cheetos? Do you really think most people who are making an effort to get healthy don't also eat lean meats, vegetables, fruits, grains, etc., maybe with Doritos and Cheetos (or whatever other food one is choosing to demonize) in moderation, within the context of an overall balanced diet?
This binary, "either/or" reasoning always puzzles me. It's as if there are only two possibilities - gorge yourself on junk food all day every day, or eat nothing but the purest, most wholesome foods at all times. As if there could be no reasonable middle ground. And assuming that if you eat so much as ONE "unhealthy" meal/snack, your entire body is poisoned, diseased and rapidly spiraling toward death.
We're talking about different things here.
Again, the OP didn't ask "is eating the occasional junk food detrimental to your health in the context of an overall balanced diet?".
The way he worded his post made it sound as if he sees no difference between 'natural' and 'unnatural' foods at all and therefore they're entirely equal and it's a false dichotomy to separate them and pointless to choose one over the other.
That's an entirely different argument, and I will stand by my opinion that they are NOT equal.
Again going back to caffeine and alcohol (both natural substances mind you, but that does not make them any healthier) - can you consume both within the context of a healthy diet and experience no ill effects? Of course. Does that make either of them good for your health and completely without *some* degree of risk? No. Little is confirmed with studies, it seems to go back and forth, but the overall common sense view is they are likely to increase your risk of cancer among other diseases. The pleasure I and others derive from consuming these makes it worth it to take that risk, so be it. But I would not look down on someone who chose not to consume them at all for these reasons as being ill-informed, elitist or fear-mongering.
Artificial foods gross me out and I do not derive any pleasure from their consumption, so it's not worth it for me to eat them considering they provide no health benefits. I also don't get much pleasure from eating most fruit or vegetables but because I know they have important micronutrients so I eat them anyway. For pleasure, I would much rather enjoy good quality chocolate, quality bakery pastry, fresh-baked bread with good butter, good cheese, than cheese-flavored orange powder and 'chocolate' candy bars that have little relation to actual chocolate. But to each their own.
If I conflated "high quality" with "natural," I would probably also decide I preferred "natural" foods.
I don't see why a pastry, high quality or not, is more natural than a corn chip.
Can a pastry be good or bad, flavor-wise? Yes. But so can a corn chip.
If I conflated "contains nutrients" with "natural," I would probably also decide I preferred "natural" foods. But again, there are natural foods that aren't that nutrient-rich and some "non-natural" foods that are very nutrient-rich.
So this seems to be a case of framing the issue in a way that defines a certain outcome.
You're saying you prefer foods that you find delicious and deciding everything within that category is therefore "natural." But looking at the foods you include, I don't know if I agree with your categories or what you've decided to exclude.
Err I don't "decide" that, it's just a fact. I'm picky with my food and I take the time to find out what's in them. Pastries for me don't mean the ones out in boxes at walmart, I mean either home baked or from a good bakery that does not use artificial additives. I had the experience once of getting a raspberry eclair from a nice-looking chain bakery I haven't tried before; and as soon as I bit into it I realized the unnaturally pink filling tasted like the fake raspberry-candy flavor. Clearly there were no actual raspberries involved. I've avoided that place since.
I don't claim to eat 100% natural, we eat out, my kids get treats. I'm just saying as a general rule, I try to stay away from these things because I don't see the value, not in nutrition or taste or quality. And yes I do conflate high quality with natural because I have yet to encounter a food with artificial additives that I would consider high quality (though doesnt work the other way, there ARE certainly plenty of low quality 'natural' foods).27
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