Friday, February 2, 2007

Eat food

I was directed, by way of a medical blog I was reading, to a quite long article online explaining what's wrong with American thinking as regards to what we eat.  It was a lot more reading than I wanted to do, so I did some skimming.  But on the next-to-last page, I found these nuggets of wisdom:

1. Eat food. Though in our current state of confusion, this is much easier said than done. So try this: Don’t eat anything your great-great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food. (Sorry, but at this point Moms are as confused as the rest of us, which is why we have to go back a couple of generations, to a time before the advent of modern food products.) There are a great many foodlike items in the supermarket your ancestors wouldn’t recognize as food (Go-Gurt? Breakfast-cereal bars? Nondairy creamer?); stay away from these.

2. Avoid even those food products that come bearing health claims. They’re apt to be heavily processed, and the claims are often dubious at best. Don’t forget that margarine, one of the first industrial foods to claim that it was more healthful than the traditional food it replaced, turned out to give people heart attacks. When Kellogg’s can boast about its Healthy Heart Strawberry Vanilla cereal bars, health claims have become hopelessly compromised. (The American Heart Association charges food makers for their endorsement.) Don’t take the silence of the yams as a sign that they have nothing valuable to say about health.

3. Especially avoid food products containing ingredients that are a) unfamiliar, b) unpronounceable c) more than five in number — or that contain high-fructose corn syrup.None of these characteristics are necessarily harmful in and of themselves, but all of them are reliable markers for foods that have been highly processed.

4. Get out of the supermarket whenever possible. You won’t find any high-fructose corn syrup at the farmer’s market; you also won’t find food harvested long ago and far away. What you will find are fresh whole foods picked at the peak of nutritional quality. Precisely the kind of food your great-great-grandmother would have recognized as food.

I was very disappointed to learn that the American Heart Association charges for their endorsement.  So much for their advice, eh?

Again, the article is HERE.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm just beginning to consider the nutrition of food, after raising 5 children...how scary is that.  I always just did what my Mother did but now I realize that an awful lot of "highly processed" and chemical infested foods have crept into our diet.  It's so hard to come out of our comfort zone.

Anonymous said...

I do wish the Famers Markets and corner butchers were still accessible, but so many have fallen by the wayside...  :-/

~Amy