separate areas of the brain that evaluate carb-based foods and fat-based foods
but when carbs and fat appear in the same food together,...=“supra-additive effect“.
both areas of the brain get activated resulting in much more dopamine...
...This is why we find foods such as French fries, donuts and potato chips irresistible and this powerful reward-system is why we’ll choose French fries over baked potato and why we have no difficulty wolfing back a few donuts, even when we’ve just eaten a meal
It's why everyone (well almost) loves ice cream.. perfect sweet and fat combo..cheers @bulkbiker
interesting post..
been there, done that.
yums yums, over all other sweetie type things...for some strange reason just proved irresistible to me.
interesting about NO carbs required..food for thought
And toffee - if I start with that I won't stop. Although that proved dangerous to my fillings way before I understood how dangerous it is for my metabolism!It's why everyone (well almost) loves ice cream.. perfect sweet and fat combo..
There are someThank you @bulkbiker, She makes lots of sense. I wish there were more like her here in Australia.
I am going to follow her blogs and try to send them to some dietitians I know here !!
Thank you for this @bulkbiker, Lot of anti DAA comment and a profession is only as good as its ability to be transparent, unbiased and open to criticism.There are some
https://twitter.com/WeDietitians
is one I follow.. one of the most balanced tweeters around and speaks such good sense and takes her profession to task! Often..
Bit like sweetcorn I guess.. a wholegrain will re-emerge complete? Best not to have any at all then..?I’ve just been listening to a Tim Noakes podcast. Apparently, and I’m not asserting this as fact, humans cannot even disgest a whole grain. It must be cracked open and beaten in some way or it’s not even edible. So how many people are consuming whole grains?
The plot thickens.
Bit like sweetcorn I guess.. a wholegrain will re-emerge complete? Best not to have any at all then..?
Whole grain really means the whole of the grain and the term is permitted as a description as long as the germ, endosperm and bran are contained in the original proportions. When flour is refined only the endosperm part which contains most of the starch is retained. The alleged benefit of whole grain is that most of the vitamins are in the germ part and the bran contains fibre.I’ve just been listening to a Tim Noakes podcast. Apparently, and I’m not asserting this as fact, humans cannot even disgest a whole grain. It must be cracked open and beaten in some way or it’s not even edible. So how many people are consuming whole grains?
The plot thickens.
I'd hazard a guess that it hasn't done us any favours and so far as I'm aware we do have a digestive system that can happily handle only meat (that's how I've been eating for the past 6 months). I think there was probably more meat available on the plains than anywhere else as well as more carrion?Are we saying that we should never have begun eating grains, or that to adapt we needed a digestive system that could maintain us a meat diet, a bit like the Inuit, as well as adapt to savanna where there may have been less meat etc.
I'd say yes to that too..that and transportation so we can now eat things completely out of season and that would not have grown where we now live.. like bananas in England in January for example. Completely impossible in nature (well bananas in England almost any time in fact).And has it been the deliberate breeding of grain crops and fruit crops for commercial gain that has swung the pendulum around to the metabolic unfitness of the majority today ?
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