▲ | hombre_fatal 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Yeah, it's a good example of how useless "ultra processed" is as a heuristic when we can use a slightly better label like "junk food". So, donuts are fine because they are only a few ingredients that you can make on your stove, and they're bad once a factory makes them? Maybe only because the factory uses "chemicals"? No, it's the fried calorie-dense food that is easy to overeat while displacing nutrition from better food sources that is the problem. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | voakbasda 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Everyone here seems to be avoiding the point that ultra processed foods contain ingredients that home bakers would never use: preservatives, anti-caking agents, flavor enhancers, artificial colors and flavors. Ingredients that are not food and add little to no nutritional value. Pizza made at home will not use such things. Your local pub that makes their own pizza will not either. Fast food or frozen pizza gets their ingredients from central suppliers in bulk, and they have no choice but to use such things in order for their products to survive the extended storage, processing, transportation, and similar delays that will occur on the way to the consumer. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|