• MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml
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    22 hours ago

    Jokes aside, there’s evidence that the more processed the food in your daily consumtion is, the more likely you’re to get fat and other health issues. Our natural mechanisms to detect if you’ve had enough don’t work as well on processed food.

    Just in case someone takes this seriously.

    • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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      11 hours ago

      That’s because we designed food for efficiency types that don’t take long term health into consideration but profit.

      So we have food that does not contain undisgetible matter, bad tasting elements.

      The biggest issue we have is, lack of fibrous content and other mechanical disgestion inhibitors cause a really accelerated nutriment absorbtion profile resulting in glycemic far in excess of what an healthy person can balance, resulting in spikes of both hyper and hypo glycemic episodes which cause minor but broad and cummulative structures of the bodies that have not necessarily been evolved to handle this kind of damage. Combine this with the stress, lack of time, emotionnal needs impacted by food consumption and you end up with what have today.

      Also the logistics of portion control and the imbalance of the result by under or overshooting it(portion size, food satisfaction profile)

    • mmddmm@lemm.ee
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      11 hours ago

      At first I was surprised that anybody even thinks some people may not understand this is a joke.

      But then I remembered some people believe the Earth is flat… So yeah, it’s probably important to point it up.

    • Delphia@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      While its almost certain that whole food diets are optimal, theres nothing inherent about food being processed that makes it unhealthy. Some people take anything to do with diet/fitness/wellness to stupid places like “Ugh! That protein bar is PROCESSED! These brownies are home made from whole ingredients, I dont polute my body.” Whey protein powder is processed, multi vitamins are processed and greens powders are processed… Raw milk isnt processed… my lactose free dairy products are processed and thats best for everyone.

      • Dzso@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        It’s not literally any processing that’s the problem. It’s that what we generally call processed food is engineered to optimize for things other than the health of those who eat it: flavor, addictiveness, cheapness, etc. And all of those goals are so pervasive and so at odds with health that virtually anything we call “processed food” is terrible for us.

      • epicstove@lemmy.ca
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        21 hours ago

        Isn’t “Processed” a really open term? Like, if I bake some veggies in my oven they’re technically processed?

        • ayyy@sh.itjust.works
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          3 hours ago

          Not to mention that all the vegetables we eat have been carefully bred by humans, which is a process unrelated to nature.

        • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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          10 hours ago

          Yes. People have conflated the term “processed food” with the higher end processing that some foods get, more correctly called ultra processed foods.

          Processing food is transforming it from one state to another. Bread is a processed food because you’ve milled the wheat. Acme® Fued lewps™ are ultra processed because the corn was dissolved in acid, reconstituted into a fiberless slurry, fortified with enough vitamins to be legally referred to as nutrition, fortified with enough sugar, salt and fats to make your body demand you eat more, then bulked with milk protein concentrates to make you feel like you’re eating something substantial and also qualify as a dairy product for tax purposes.

          The conversation would often be much clearer if people didn’t use the term for “almost all food” when thet mean the more chemistry oriented type of food.

          Even within the category of ultra processed foods there are items that are perfectly benign. Breakfast cereals can be perfectly healthy, but they’re necessarily ultra processed since you need at least minimal shelf stability.

          Processing isn’t intrinsically bad, it’s just that the worst foods are ultra processed because that’s how they did the things that make them bad, and every transformation destroys some portion of the food, and eventually you need to start adding things back in to make it keep being food, or at least appearing to be food.

        • WanderingThoughts@europe.pub
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          20 hours ago

          It’s why there is also the category of ultra processed. That’s where they start to add fat, sugar, salt, dye and preservatives. That’s where things get unhealthy.

        • Delphia@lemmy.world
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          21 hours ago

          Exactly. Take my preferred snack for example, a bag of oven baked pork rinds. 37G protein, 12g fat, 0 carbs. (Ok theres an assload of salt) about 250 cals. No artificial colors, flavours or preservatives… is that “processed”?

          My point was more along the lines that a “processed” formed chicken breast pattie isnt somehow worse for you than a big slab of crunchy fatty pork belly because it went through a machine. Its possible to make good decisions involving processed food and terrible whole foods decisions too… delicious decadent “now I want pork belly” decisions. I do wonder how many of these studies control for calorie intake, quality of nutrition, etc.

          • BudgetBandit@sh.itjust.works
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            20 hours ago

            In my honest opinion, processed things are things that are, through scientific methods, made to be addictive. Like Pringles having the perfect crunch or different chemical compounds of Red Bull (color spot on the bottom). I don’t count cured meat as processed, but I have a hard time calling a pound of deli ham anything but processed.

            • Delphia@lemmy.world
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              19 hours ago

              See you just gave me the perfect example. Pringles.

              Compare the macros on a serve of Pringles (definitely an ultra-processed food. I googled the ingredients - Dehydrated potato, vegetable oils, wheat starch (gluten), rice flour, emulsifier (471), maltodextrin, salt, acidity regulator (330).) and a serve of Kettle Chips (Potatoes, sunflower oil, sea salt) the macros are pretty damn close to the same. One is ultra-processed, one is at least processed and I imagine if you thinly sliced a potato and fried it at home and salted them you would get a similar product with similar nutrition to the Kettle chips but would it still be considered processed?

              Admittedly there is an argument to be made about micronutrients and phytochemicals that would give the kettles and home mades a slight edge on any “which is healthier” discussion, but the honest answer to “Which of these foods should you sit down and demolish a salad bowl full of?” is NONE because processed or not, its a highly paletable bowl of calorie dense food thats incredibly easy to over consume.

              The problem isnt the processing, the problem is that making a giant pile of home made chips is hard and time consuming so you probably wont and a bag of Kettles is a $3 addition to my trolley.

              • BudgetBandit@sh.itjust.works
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                19 hours ago

                The problem isnt the processing, the problem is that making a giant pile of home made chips is hard and time consuming so you probably wont

                This is it exactly! Look at noodles! I consider them processed food, and since I got a noodle machine (non-electric) I don’t eat them as often as I used to.

                Even if you got the flour at home, it’s still very time consuming. you would think twice if you just throw some potatoes into boiling water or if you risk making your kitchen dirty while hand-making noodles.

      • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Processed unhealthy foods are generally viewed as the items that have been stripped down in to some degree and then reassembled with ingredients like sugar, preservatives, flavors, dyes, stabilizers, etc.

        Many studies have shown that yes, indeed, there are processed foods that are inherently unhealthy. We don’t need to play with semantics of what “processed” means to split hairs in an effort to be right.

        • Delphia@lemmy.world
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          19 hours ago

          First thing I said was that whole foods are optimal, thats the key takeaway here. Yeah, some processed foods are TERRIBLE for you, some processed foods are “not bad” for you, some are even healthy. My point is that a food being processed isnt the defining element on wether or not its bad for you. In most cases its the ease of access combined with the hyper paletable nature of processed foods that will do you in.

    • JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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      19 hours ago

      You have a study link? I’m interested in how they show causation. Because health conscious people will be more likely to eat healthier, and less likely to eat highly processed foods.