Does this paywalled article even contain a definition of "processed" in this context?
I've never understood what that word means in the context of food. I have something in my kitchen called a "food processor". It spins around and chops things with a blade. Is the product of a "food processor" not "processed food"?
The closest I can figure to the media definition is that it is food that contains a lot of salt. Perhaps also preservatives. So are we really talking about the health effects of salt and preservatives?
I take umbrage with "frozen meals." Very often a frozen meal has straight up whole vegetables or pieces of meat. Freezing is one of the best ways to retain nutrition of vegetables etc as well.
The tl;dr of ultraprocessed is that it's those exclusively industrial foods prepared with ingredients you wouldn't stock in your pantry (high fructose corn syrup, artificial flavors, protein isolate, etc)
In part, these foods are bad because they are high in sygar and salt. But that's not the point of the classification, which intentionally takes a step back from the old approach based of mesuring the individul ingredients and macronutrients. The central thesis is that, for public health policy it's easier to frame it as a discussion of traditional food vs industrial junk, and how ultraprocessed foods are replacing traditional foods. The classification doesn't want to get lost in the details of ingredients, which the industry has always been adept at gaming anyway (fat is the boogeyman -> replace it with sugar, add vitamins to make it sound healthier, etc)
Your entire explanation seems to rest critically on this point.
After COVID, I cannot support what's "easier" for public health policy. Do the work.
"Easier" got us "N95s don't protect against COVID" and then it was "oh wait, actually cloth masks do!"
A lot of this stuff relies on trust.
I won't sit here and try to pretend that you will find health eating Doritos or McDonald's Big Macs. But is something like a low-sugar protein bar a decent option? How about Soylent?
These are the nuanced questions that are actually useful to answer. Nobody actually thinks "ultra processed foods" are good for you to begin with.
Why shouldn't the burden of proof be on the people making these meal replacements?
The NOVA system is more interested in the wider effect of ultraprocessed foods replacing existing eating and cooking habits. The Brazilian dietary guidelines that were inspired by NOVA places a lot of importance in the social aspects of procuring food, preparing it, and eating it. In a sense, it's the antithesis of products such as Soylent.
> Why shouldn't the burden of proof be on the people making these meal replacements?
So we can have what, one source on the issue with a very obvious conflict of interest? What kind of sense does that make?
> The NOVA system is more interested in the wider effect of ultraprocessed foods replacing existing eating and cooking habits.
I wasn't make a comment on what they do. I was making a comment on what I would find useful.
I don't find saying "ultraprocessed bad mmmm'kay" particularly interesting or insightful. All processes and preservatives are not equal. Pretending they are (or even just glossing over the details) is unscientific and a waste of time and money.
> "for public policy it's easier to frame it as traditional food vs industrial junk"
This isn't research, this is simplistic populist fear-mongering.
It's a bit like saying "the economic research does not want to go into the details of the different economic benefits and drawbacks of immigration, instead it's easier to frame it as the smart educated whites versus the hordes of dirty foreigners coming into the country" and expecting this argument to be taken seriously.
One definition of ultraprocessed that I heard was the sort of food that needs specialised industrial processes and / or ingredients to create - something you couldn't really prepare in your kitchen.
Cheese & wine count as processed, but not as ultraprocessed. Kraft singles and other highly processed "cheese" are ultraprocessed. The main rule of thumb is to look at how long the ingredient list is.
There's the NOVA classifications. I'd say the major concerns are refinement, like white bread, white sugar, white rice, most oils are highly chemically processed besides "cold-pressed".
On the flip side, foods should ideally be identifiable(look natural), and ideally, according to numerous studies, like on blue zones, where people tend to prioritize fresh fruits and vegetables, prepared 'simply'. The ideal amount of fruits and veggies tends to be around 9-12 servings, daily.
>Does this paywalled article even contain a definition of "processed" in this context?
Or worse the ultraprocessed level. I dont think the article adequately defines either, but one can see what they are attempting to explain.
>I've never understood what that word means in the context of food. I have something in my kitchen called a "food processor". It spins around and chops things with a blade. Is the product of a "food processor" not "processed food"?
I think the author is not talking about food processors or doing procedures on food exactly. But rather suggesting the problem is industrialized food. "Soy protein isolate" is not something you're making in your kitchen. Or various other chemistry lab foods are allegedly a problem.
>The closest I can figure to the media definition is that it is food that contains a lot of salt. Perhaps also preservatives. So are we really talking about the health effects of salt and preservatives?
Preservatives do come into it. But it seems to me the diet folks are really struggling to figure out the correct diet.
The main issues are dilution or outright removal of actual other nutritional components and usually yes, also the coexistence of other "adulterating" components, added for other reasons, usually colorants, preservatives and stabilizers.
Ultraprocessed foods tend to either fall into junk food or preserves as categories.
And no, adding a few vitamins doesn't restore the most of nutritional value. Especially when the removed things are fiber (for density) and essential oils (to prevent rancidity and extend shelf life).
Sometimes even the absorption rate can change things - easier to overload on protein for example with micronized isolates than with slices of tofu, as they absorb so much better.
Is also why it's easier to mess yourself up with sucrose (sugar) than with whole fruit, or with the purified juices.
> And no, adding a few vitamins doesn't restore the most of nutritional value. Especially when the removed things are fiber (for density) and essential oils (to prevent rancidity and extend shelf life).
I was mostly thinking about using protein isolate in cooking (TVP soy curls, ...), where you use it for the texture and maybe protein content.
You pair it with a lot of other stuff, let's say some stir-fried vegetables, a light sauce and rice.
Does soy protein isolate on the above have negative effects, or is it just that using less processed stuff, like tofu instead, would be healthier?
> it seems to me the diet folks are really struggling to figure out the correct diet.
There is no "nutrition science", just waves of fad after fad. Look up Dr. Ancel Keys, father of "low fat" and how he would simply throw out results of experiments if they did not match his per-conceptions.
>There is no "nutrition science", just waves of fad after fad. Look up Dr. Ancel Keys, father of "low fat" and how he would simply throw out results of experiments if they did not match his per-conceptions.
Quite familiar with this and totally agree.
I have been kind of working on figuring out the correct diet and why so many others seem to work.
1. Nothing industrial/chemsitry.
2. Nothing with high histamines.
3. Evaluate/eliminate food alergies; most people have this problem but it's quite mild.
Soy protein isolate is most definitely something that can be home made. Assuming you have a high rev centrifuge.
Otherwise you end up with soy protein that is not an isolate. Similar to purified soy flour which is already a highly processed food, and soymilk.
It will still be vastly purer nutritionally than either tofu or soy.
It's the same as the difference between whey protein (from milk) and whey protein isolate of various grades. Not that huge in the grand scheme of things, except for taste and amount of sugars left in it.
I determine the difference with this simple model:
1. It's processed if the list of ingredients spans a sizable portion of the package or label.
2. It's less (or not) processed if the list of ingredients is quite small.
The line between 1 and 2 is totally subjective, of course.
One example comes to mind: peanut butter, something my kids devour.
Lots of peanut butter jars have extra things: salt, random oils (for spreading), etc. But, can peanut butter just be just peanuts? Yep, if you spend some extra time looking.
Another example is an RxBar (less processed, few ingredients) vs. any standard granola (very processed, lots of ingredients) bar.
And of course, so much stuff for kids is processed and worse.
I enjoyed this article, and it mostly confirms my mental model: the worst part about processed foods is how easy and enjoyable they are to eat. Avoiding them may have ancillary benefits for health (like fiber or vitamin intake), but mostly it's about being satiated and not overconsuming.
This has been my mental model as well. I often use two analogies to describe this.
The processed a food is the more likely you’re eating a “Product”, i.e. something that’s been designed to consumed and enjoyed.
I don’t say that as a necessarily bad thing. We’ve making foods more enjoyable for the history of civilization (broccoli was bred by humans from a wild cabbage) but industrialization has given us an ability to create new things faster than our biology can adapt.
The other analogy is to think of UPF, especially nominally nutritious ones like protein bars, as the nutritional equivalent of power tools. They can be really powerful for dialing in your macros or taste desires. But must be used carefully and are potentially dangerous if untrained.
In other words it's not necessarily about some scary sleuth carcinogen or some oil that's gonna wipe out your cardiac health... it's about calories and the body's response to too many of them, and the ancillary "ratio" of calories to nutrition being too high.
There needs to be some good (not 20 people for 2 weeks) studies which compare the effects of "ultraprocessed food" vs "really tasty food", keeping total kcals constantly high. My guess is that a high proportion of the negative effects come from an excess of salt, sugar and fat (and too many calories in general) - which is precisely how they get the food tasting so nice in fancy restaurants.
I'm also sure there definitely are chemicals we're consuming in UPFs which are bad for us, but a lot of them are probably fine. Lumping everything together so it's possible for people to get the idea that an organic yogurt is somehow just as bad as a tube of Pringles seems counterproductive.
There's one problem you face with issues like this. One reason it took so long to prove, beyond significant doubt, that cigarettes cause cancer is because it's something that happens over many decades and with high variance. Fewer than 20% of smokers will get lung cancer over their whole lives. You cannot experimentally prove side effects that happen only over such prolonged periods of time. So you're left with observational correlations that, to this day, are even scrutinized by some eccentric scientists.
When you look at society today, it's going downhill in terms of overall health in a multitude of ways across both the physical and mental/psychological domains. Lowered testosterone, increased obesity, increased mental illness, decreasing IQs [1], and so on endlessly. And if something like e.g. processed foods ends up being one of the factors in this, it may well be another one of those things that's basically impossible to actually prove - outside of extremely long-term correlations which can be endlessly challenged, exactly like this article is doing.
And the correlations in this case will be even easier to challenge. Like you mentioned processed foods are enjoyable to eat. They're made to generate profit and so hone in on every little receptor, desire, and impulsive (or even addictive) tendency in our bodies. People are only going to avoid this if they're already substantially health conscious, so even observational correlations can be trivially challenged. So how can we ever hope to prove anything, especially when there may be every reason to expect absolutely zilch will show up in short controlled experimental trials?
Best analogy for me is juice vs fruit. Its easy to gulp down 2 glasses of Orange juice, but cannot eat 8 oranges. Unprocessed food usually is more wholesome and makes you feel satiated.
This. And honestly, I feel satisfied after a single orange's worth of OJ from my juice press, which is about half a standard cup. Sometimes a bit more, sometimes less. But it's all I need, and it tastes absolutely delicious.
I grew up drinking OJ from concentrate, and when I was a kid I didn't like the natural stuff. Now it's all I'll ever drink, fuck buying premade juice from the store.
Fresh juice is so good. Yes, it's a bit pricier (I pay $1.99/pound for organic valencias at Whole Foods), and yes, it is more time consuming (gotta assemble the machine, juice, clean the machine, take it apart) but the taste and nutritional difference is astounding.
I really think we need to come up with separate words for
"Healthy because it isn't very fattening"
and
"Healthy because it's nutritious and doesn't contain stuff that damages your body"
The amount of confusion this generates is enormous, and leads to things like people eating peanut butter to lose weight, or eating synthetic junk because it has low calories.
Cookies are unhealthy because they are very fattening. But if you are normal weight, it's not that big of a deal.
Sausage is unhealthy because it contains nitrates. Overweight or underweight it's not good to consume.
These definitions are surprisingly tricky because there is an adversarial process at play: any slack will be ruthlessly exploited by those looking to pretend that their pizza is healthy because they ground the flour themselves (or whatever).
Electric motors were a thing when I was a kid, but we used to mill wheat by hand anyway! We had a crank mill in the garage, and when my mother wanted to bake bread she'd send one of us kids out to make some flour.
The example that popped into my head was this: Impossible Burger is "healthier" than regular beef burger.
Health aside, these sorts of conclusions (I'm guilty too) say nothing about how processed or not something is. My anecdotal take: an Impossible burger is processed food.
Put another way, health is very multi-dimensional. I'm quite confident that an Impossible Burger is healthier along some dimensions, and a beef burger healthier along others.
Food marketers are experts at exploiting this: if a food is unhealthier in 397 different ways but healthier in 1, then guess what gets highlighted on the packaging....
I would say impossible burger is at very far end of ultraprocessing. Hamburger could be simply just processed. It really comes to what those terms mean, but impossible burgers are more processed than hamburgers. And likely don't solve other issues of burgers.
Right. I wasn't making a point about environmental impacts, for example. I know some folks see that as the main differentiator (that I understand). My point was just to draw a distinction between what seems more "processed" vs not - knowing that the terms aren't well-defined.
Every single food item can be "fattening", so categorizing them as such is inaccurate. You can eat cookies and lose fat if you're in a net caloric deficit, and you can gain fat from celery if it puts you in a surplus.
I'm talking about literal, unprocessed celery sticks. I understand that the notion that the digestion of celery burns more energy than it provides is a myth.
If celery was all you ate, I doubt it would be possible to gain weight. It's so calorie-poor that it's hard to imagine being able to eat enough to surpass your basal metabolic needs.
I agree. My argument is that if your calories from food equal your energy expenditure over a given time period, and then you eat a single celery stalk, then the energy from the celery will "fatten" you (and/or contribute to muscle protein synthesis if you exercise). Conversely, if you ate nothing but cookies, but the total energy of those cookies was below what your body expended, then your body will necessarily make up for it by dipping into your fat reserves. Hence why labelling foods as "fattening" or "not fattening" is inaccurate.
I think this is ignoring the fundamental issues with weight and health. Each day you naturally burn a set amount of calories dependent upon a number of factors - largest being your activity level and your current weight. If you go over what your body burns, you will gain weight. If you stay under it, you will lose weight. It's that simple.
Of course nutrition is critical in this. You need a set amount of vitamins, proteins/amino acids, and so on, to keep your body functioning optimally. Eating a cookie provides basically nothing in terms of nutrition and sends your a pretty good chunk of the way towards your daily 'limit' of consumption. So it means if you eat a cookie you're going to need to be that much more nutritionally conscious on a smaller limit of max calories, to remain healthy.
Paradoxically, this is even more true for fit individuals than fat. Even when you're doing nothing, your body is constantly burning calories to keep things going. Fat individual's bodies have to work far harder during this process, and so they passively burn far more calories than fit individuals. This is why an obese person could, in general, start losing weight by "just" eating 3000 calories a day. By contrast, eating 3000 calories a day would see a fit person's weight start rapidly increasing. So a fit person has a far smaller limit to squeeze in all their nutrients. It leads to the paradoxical outcome that that cookie is relatively worse for you if you're fit than if you're fat!
The angle is "Ultraprocessed Foods" are bad but skirts around the issue that some are not bad, such as multigrain bread and plant milks. Further, Ultraprocessed Foods tend to be very inexpensive from a cost and time perspective.
The proposed solutions - cooking everything from scratch, cutting out processed pasta, going down to buy fresh bread from a bakery "if you can afford it" - are unworkable for millions of people living paycheck to paycheck.
Maybe it would have been better to frame this as junk food/high calorie/high sugar/high sodium/high carb/high saturated fats are the main problem from a public health perspective. And that's already widely known.
I started a small beverage company focused on the athletic market in my local area. The main drawback to my product is that it's not shelf-life stable - it's only good for a few days (weeks if kept frozen).
Some love my stuff and swear by it. However, one of my big issues when talking to investors, even health-obsessed ones is "well, Pepsi makes stuff that lasts years on the shelf, so why can't you?" or "I'm not even considering this as a product until I can buy it in bulk at CostCo". They don't understand that there's literally no comparison when you're comparing:
1. A product made in a lab with almost zero natural ingredients, and designed to last years on the shelf without refrigeration and be shipped all over the world.
and
2. A product made in a local professional kitchen, with natural ingredients, designed to be consumed quickly by a very specific demographic of people.
It's maddening, even though my sales are pretty damn good. Some people just have this mentality that "if it doesn't last long, and I can't buy it in bulk, it's not good".
Because our entire food industry has been co-opted by profit-first corporations (who work from a profitability standpoint versus a health standpoint), nobody seems to want to understand that stuff that lasts long and can be kept in heat without going bad is probably not healthy.
The only marketing I really do is occasionally do table days and I also hand out drinks every now and then to trainers, front desk staff, and management.
I retained a marketing firm last week to help me grow my marketing as I improve my production capacity.
But my first year of sales were all word-of-mouth at a high-end gym chain (where I'm also a member, and was a member for nearly 5 years prior to starting the business). In such environments where people aren't usually swayed by traditional marketing efforts, monkey-see-monkey-do is usually the way products take hold. If the regular attendees see people whose bodies they want to emulate consuming my products, they tend to try them and often turn into repeat customers.
That said if you have any thoughts, questions, comments, experience, etc - I'm all ears.
Have you tried having those word-of-mouth people at the gyms write a google review telling their story of the gym with some nice pictures that include your drinks?
Those google reviews get a lot more views than people realize if they are written right.
I have! The only problem then is that some people leave reviews saying "my favorite drink is never in stock!".
I'm working on upping my production capacity with the help of a professional bottling facility and private chef, so sometimes stuff is sold out when people want to buy it. I'm also developing a D2C platform to sell to people who want delivery, but that's a few steps ahead of me right now.
I'd love to hear where or if you think there is an obvious balancing point between shelf-stable and not in solid food?
I've thought of making my own protein bars, as I work out quite a bit and would prefer understanding exactly what I'm consuming. But I also don't want to throw away food that isn't getting consumed.
>I'd love to hear where or if you think there is an obvious balancing point between shelf-stable and not in solid food?
Not sure I understand the question - but what I will say is that the longer the shelf-life is (non-refrigerated) the more likely it is that it was made in a lab, not a kitchen.
>I've thought of making my own protein bars, as I work out quite a bit and would prefer understanding exactly what I'm consuming. But I also don't want to throw away food that isn't getting consumed.
That was the mentality the guys who created RxBar had. They were avid gym goers and wanted something better, so they made it themselves. Worked out for the two of them to the tune of a $600 Million exit.
Making your own protein bars is actually surprisingly simple.
Surprised not seeing a reference to the book "Ultra-Processed People: The Science Behind Food That Isn't Food" by "Chris van Tulleken". The article looks like it comes straight from the book.
I get a sense this whole "ultra-processed foods" meme is a giant distraction from some actual culprit.
No doubt it's unhealthy to eat an unbalanced diet represented by UPFs, with lots of carbs, fat, sugar and additives, etc, but I think there are likely some specific ingredients that differentiate between a simple unbalanced diet, and a UPF diet.
Sugar was a perfectly fine ingredient until fairly recently, and I suspect vegetable oil, perhaps some specific oils, might be the next revelation.
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[ 3.1 ms ] story [ 169 ms ] threadI've never understood what that word means in the context of food. I have something in my kitchen called a "food processor". It spins around and chops things with a blade. Is the product of a "food processor" not "processed food"?
The closest I can figure to the media definition is that it is food that contains a lot of salt. Perhaps also preservatives. So are we really talking about the health effects of salt and preservatives?
> Ultra-processed foods encompass a broad category ranging from cookies, doughnuts and potato chips to hot dogs, white bread and frozen meals.
Totally different than white bread or hot dogs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nova_classification
The tl;dr of ultraprocessed is that it's those exclusively industrial foods prepared with ingredients you wouldn't stock in your pantry (high fructose corn syrup, artificial flavors, protein isolate, etc)
In part, these foods are bad because they are high in sygar and salt. But that's not the point of the classification, which intentionally takes a step back from the old approach based of mesuring the individul ingredients and macronutrients. The central thesis is that, for public health policy it's easier to frame it as a discussion of traditional food vs industrial junk, and how ultraprocessed foods are replacing traditional foods. The classification doesn't want to get lost in the details of ingredients, which the industry has always been adept at gaming anyway (fat is the boogeyman -> replace it with sugar, add vitamins to make it sound healthier, etc)
Your entire explanation seems to rest critically on this point.
After COVID, I cannot support what's "easier" for public health policy. Do the work.
"Easier" got us "N95s don't protect against COVID" and then it was "oh wait, actually cloth masks do!"
A lot of this stuff relies on trust.
I won't sit here and try to pretend that you will find health eating Doritos or McDonald's Big Macs. But is something like a low-sugar protein bar a decent option? How about Soylent?
These are the nuanced questions that are actually useful to answer. Nobody actually thinks "ultra processed foods" are good for you to begin with.
The NOVA system is more interested in the wider effect of ultraprocessed foods replacing existing eating and cooking habits. The Brazilian dietary guidelines that were inspired by NOVA places a lot of importance in the social aspects of procuring food, preparing it, and eating it. In a sense, it's the antithesis of products such as Soylent.
So we can have what, one source on the issue with a very obvious conflict of interest? What kind of sense does that make?
> The NOVA system is more interested in the wider effect of ultraprocessed foods replacing existing eating and cooking habits.
I wasn't make a comment on what they do. I was making a comment on what I would find useful.
I don't find saying "ultraprocessed bad mmmm'kay" particularly interesting or insightful. All processes and preservatives are not equal. Pretending they are (or even just glossing over the details) is unscientific and a waste of time and money.
This isn't research, this is simplistic populist fear-mongering.
It's a bit like saying "the economic research does not want to go into the details of the different economic benefits and drawbacks of immigration, instead it's easier to frame it as the smart educated whites versus the hordes of dirty foreigners coming into the country" and expecting this argument to be taken seriously.
- put unpasteurized milk in a saucepan
- bring it to slow simmer (~180F)
- add a splash of an acid (lemon, white vinegar, etc) and remove from heat
- skim and collect the curd that forms on top.
This is fresh ricotta and it will make you very happy.
Coarse ground brown flour is processed, but not ultra-processed.
It's also surprisingly modern -- traditional flours are far more coarsely ground.
On the flip side, foods should ideally be identifiable(look natural), and ideally, according to numerous studies, like on blue zones, where people tend to prioritize fresh fruits and vegetables, prepared 'simply'. The ideal amount of fruits and veggies tends to be around 9-12 servings, daily.
Best cocking show ever. German but still watchable. You will realize that you must be nuts to eat processed food
Or worse the ultraprocessed level. I dont think the article adequately defines either, but one can see what they are attempting to explain.
>I've never understood what that word means in the context of food. I have something in my kitchen called a "food processor". It spins around and chops things with a blade. Is the product of a "food processor" not "processed food"?
I think the author is not talking about food processors or doing procedures on food exactly. But rather suggesting the problem is industrialized food. "Soy protein isolate" is not something you're making in your kitchen. Or various other chemistry lab foods are allegedly a problem.
>The closest I can figure to the media definition is that it is food that contains a lot of salt. Perhaps also preservatives. So are we really talking about the health effects of salt and preservatives?
Preservatives do come into it. But it seems to me the diet folks are really struggling to figure out the correct diet.
Is the idea that there is cemical resedue from the processing? Or is it that it's usually used in food that also include unhealty ingrediants?
Ultraprocessed foods tend to either fall into junk food or preserves as categories.
And no, adding a few vitamins doesn't restore the most of nutritional value. Especially when the removed things are fiber (for density) and essential oils (to prevent rancidity and extend shelf life).
Sometimes even the absorption rate can change things - easier to overload on protein for example with micronized isolates than with slices of tofu, as they absorb so much better.
Is also why it's easier to mess yourself up with sucrose (sugar) than with whole fruit, or with the purified juices.
I was mostly thinking about using protein isolate in cooking (TVP soy curls, ...), where you use it for the texture and maybe protein content. You pair it with a lot of other stuff, let's say some stir-fried vegetables, a light sauce and rice.
Does soy protein isolate on the above have negative effects, or is it just that using less processed stuff, like tofu instead, would be healthier?
There is no "nutrition science", just waves of fad after fad. Look up Dr. Ancel Keys, father of "low fat" and how he would simply throw out results of experiments if they did not match his per-conceptions.
Quite familiar with this and totally agree.
I have been kind of working on figuring out the correct diet and why so many others seem to work.
1. Nothing industrial/chemsitry.
2. Nothing with high histamines.
3. Evaluate/eliminate food alergies; most people have this problem but it's quite mild.
4. Keto levels of carbs.
Otherwise you end up with soy protein that is not an isolate. Similar to purified soy flour which is already a highly processed food, and soymilk. It will still be vastly purer nutritionally than either tofu or soy.
It's the same as the difference between whey protein (from milk) and whey protein isolate of various grades. Not that huge in the grand scheme of things, except for taste and amount of sugars left in it.
My wife is still angry that I wrecked our kitchen high rev centrifuge with Uranium dust.
1. It's processed if the list of ingredients spans a sizable portion of the package or label. 2. It's less (or not) processed if the list of ingredients is quite small.
The line between 1 and 2 is totally subjective, of course.
One example comes to mind: peanut butter, something my kids devour.
Lots of peanut butter jars have extra things: salt, random oils (for spreading), etc. But, can peanut butter just be just peanuts? Yep, if you spend some extra time looking.
Another example is an RxBar (less processed, few ingredients) vs. any standard granola (very processed, lots of ingredients) bar.
And of course, so much stuff for kids is processed and worse.
The processed a food is the more likely you’re eating a “Product”, i.e. something that’s been designed to consumed and enjoyed.
I don’t say that as a necessarily bad thing. We’ve making foods more enjoyable for the history of civilization (broccoli was bred by humans from a wild cabbage) but industrialization has given us an ability to create new things faster than our biology can adapt.
The other analogy is to think of UPF, especially nominally nutritious ones like protein bars, as the nutritional equivalent of power tools. They can be really powerful for dialing in your macros or taste desires. But must be used carefully and are potentially dangerous if untrained.
There needs to be some good (not 20 people for 2 weeks) studies which compare the effects of "ultraprocessed food" vs "really tasty food", keeping total kcals constantly high. My guess is that a high proportion of the negative effects come from an excess of salt, sugar and fat (and too many calories in general) - which is precisely how they get the food tasting so nice in fancy restaurants.
I'm also sure there definitely are chemicals we're consuming in UPFs which are bad for us, but a lot of them are probably fine. Lumping everything together so it's possible for people to get the idea that an organic yogurt is somehow just as bad as a tube of Pringles seems counterproductive.
When you look at society today, it's going downhill in terms of overall health in a multitude of ways across both the physical and mental/psychological domains. Lowered testosterone, increased obesity, increased mental illness, decreasing IQs [1], and so on endlessly. And if something like e.g. processed foods ends up being one of the factors in this, it may well be another one of those things that's basically impossible to actually prove - outside of extremely long-term correlations which can be endlessly challenged, exactly like this article is doing.
And the correlations in this case will be even easier to challenge. Like you mentioned processed foods are enjoyable to eat. They're made to generate profit and so hone in on every little receptor, desire, and impulsive (or even addictive) tendency in our bodies. People are only going to avoid this if they're already substantially health conscious, so even observational correlations can be trivially challenged. So how can we ever hope to prove anything, especially when there may be every reason to expect absolutely zilch will show up in short controlled experimental trials?
[1] - https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S016028962...
I grew up drinking OJ from concentrate, and when I was a kid I didn't like the natural stuff. Now it's all I'll ever drink, fuck buying premade juice from the store.
Fresh juice is so good. Yes, it's a bit pricier (I pay $1.99/pound for organic valencias at Whole Foods), and yes, it is more time consuming (gotta assemble the machine, juice, clean the machine, take it apart) but the taste and nutritional difference is astounding.
"Healthy because it isn't very fattening"
and
"Healthy because it's nutritious and doesn't contain stuff that damages your body"
The amount of confusion this generates is enormous, and leads to things like people eating peanut butter to lose weight, or eating synthetic junk because it has low calories.
Cookies are unhealthy because they are very fattening. But if you are normal weight, it's not that big of a deal.
Sausage is unhealthy because it contains nitrates. Overweight or underweight it's not good to consume.
with the amount of energy you expend grinding the flour, you may just end up with a pizza that has net negative calories
grounding you own flour is as complex as flicking a switch and letting the machine do the work for you.
nah that's not how you get the "human factor" into the dough
you have to roll up your sleeves and put the work in using your own motors, otherwise it's just "store-bought"
The example that popped into my head was this: Impossible Burger is "healthier" than regular beef burger.
Health aside, these sorts of conclusions (I'm guilty too) say nothing about how processed or not something is. My anecdotal take: an Impossible burger is processed food.
Food marketers are experts at exploiting this: if a food is unhealthier in 397 different ways but healthier in 1, then guess what gets highlighted on the packaging....
Agree! And I was quite deliberate in not making that point in my statement.
Every single food item can be "fattening", so categorizing them as such is inaccurate. You can eat cookies and lose fat if you're in a net caloric deficit, and you can gain fat from celery if it puts you in a surplus.
Otherwise the thing takes more energy to process than it provides.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative-calorie_food
Of course nutrition is critical in this. You need a set amount of vitamins, proteins/amino acids, and so on, to keep your body functioning optimally. Eating a cookie provides basically nothing in terms of nutrition and sends your a pretty good chunk of the way towards your daily 'limit' of consumption. So it means if you eat a cookie you're going to need to be that much more nutritionally conscious on a smaller limit of max calories, to remain healthy.
Paradoxically, this is even more true for fit individuals than fat. Even when you're doing nothing, your body is constantly burning calories to keep things going. Fat individual's bodies have to work far harder during this process, and so they passively burn far more calories than fit individuals. This is why an obese person could, in general, start losing weight by "just" eating 3000 calories a day. By contrast, eating 3000 calories a day would see a fit person's weight start rapidly increasing. So a fit person has a far smaller limit to squeeze in all their nutrients. It leads to the paradoxical outcome that that cookie is relatively worse for you if you're fit than if you're fat!
The angle is "Ultraprocessed Foods" are bad but skirts around the issue that some are not bad, such as multigrain bread and plant milks. Further, Ultraprocessed Foods tend to be very inexpensive from a cost and time perspective.
The proposed solutions - cooking everything from scratch, cutting out processed pasta, going down to buy fresh bread from a bakery "if you can afford it" - are unworkable for millions of people living paycheck to paycheck.
Maybe it would have been better to frame this as junk food/high calorie/high sugar/high sodium/high carb/high saturated fats are the main problem from a public health perspective. And that's already widely known.
Are plastics killing us?
https://senecaeffect.substack.com/p/are-plastics-killing-us
I think very highly of ugo bardi
Eating for Two: Nourishing Yourself and Your Gut Microbiome
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8l4ofIBJ0GQ
Some love my stuff and swear by it. However, one of my big issues when talking to investors, even health-obsessed ones is "well, Pepsi makes stuff that lasts years on the shelf, so why can't you?" or "I'm not even considering this as a product until I can buy it in bulk at CostCo". They don't understand that there's literally no comparison when you're comparing:
1. A product made in a lab with almost zero natural ingredients, and designed to last years on the shelf without refrigeration and be shipped all over the world.
and
2. A product made in a local professional kitchen, with natural ingredients, designed to be consumed quickly by a very specific demographic of people.
It's maddening, even though my sales are pretty damn good. Some people just have this mentality that "if it doesn't last long, and I can't buy it in bulk, it's not good".
Because our entire food industry has been co-opted by profit-first corporations (who work from a profitability standpoint versus a health standpoint), nobody seems to want to understand that stuff that lasts long and can be kept in heat without going bad is probably not healthy.
I retained a marketing firm last week to help me grow my marketing as I improve my production capacity.
But my first year of sales were all word-of-mouth at a high-end gym chain (where I'm also a member, and was a member for nearly 5 years prior to starting the business). In such environments where people aren't usually swayed by traditional marketing efforts, monkey-see-monkey-do is usually the way products take hold. If the regular attendees see people whose bodies they want to emulate consuming my products, they tend to try them and often turn into repeat customers.
That said if you have any thoughts, questions, comments, experience, etc - I'm all ears.
Those google reviews get a lot more views than people realize if they are written right.
I'm working on upping my production capacity with the help of a professional bottling facility and private chef, so sometimes stuff is sold out when people want to buy it. I'm also developing a D2C platform to sell to people who want delivery, but that's a few steps ahead of me right now.
I've thought of making my own protein bars, as I work out quite a bit and would prefer understanding exactly what I'm consuming. But I also don't want to throw away food that isn't getting consumed.
Similar thinking around kid food.
Not sure I understand the question - but what I will say is that the longer the shelf-life is (non-refrigerated) the more likely it is that it was made in a lab, not a kitchen.
>I've thought of making my own protein bars, as I work out quite a bit and would prefer understanding exactly what I'm consuming. But I also don't want to throw away food that isn't getting consumed.
That was the mentality the guys who created RxBar had. They were avid gym goers and wanted something better, so they made it themselves. Worked out for the two of them to the tune of a $600 Million exit.
Making your own protein bars is actually surprisingly simple.
No doubt it's unhealthy to eat an unbalanced diet represented by UPFs, with lots of carbs, fat, sugar and additives, etc, but I think there are likely some specific ingredients that differentiate between a simple unbalanced diet, and a UPF diet.
Sugar was a perfectly fine ingredient until fairly recently, and I suspect vegetable oil, perhaps some specific oils, might be the next revelation.