http://weightmaven.org/2013/11/11/quote-of-the-day-190/
http://www.fatnutritionist.com/index.php/real-food/
but the twinkie will leave you wanting more. Real food grew in a garden or on a farm. You can eat it raw, or simply cooked. No messing about. No need of a recipe. Simple. No hyperpalatable. No Addictive nature.
Rigorous Honesty, in the search of recovery from gross obesity. Mainly opinion, not advice. Some speculation, some errors, some fiction. Sugar, grain and processed products are not food. Omega 6 oil and dairy should be mainly avoided.
"Real food grew in a garden or on a farm. You can eat it raw, or simply cooked."
ReplyDeleteEat real food not processed, our bodies feel and are much better for it.
All the best Jan
"real food" has nutritive value. just because one con ingest and digest (mostly) a twinkie doesn't give it ANY upside. if they didn't "enrich" the white flour in it, there would be NOTHING there that the body actually needs.
ReplyDeleteAND THEY DON"T EVEN TASTE GOOD! that's what gets me -- they're sweet and vanilla-y, but they've got a horrible artificial mouth-feel. compare that to a real cream-puff....
Yes but why do I still want them, even though I have not eaten one for years, probably 30 years?
ReplyDelete"Yes but why do I still want them, even though I have not eaten one for years," Good for you Fred!
ReplyDeleteAs a child in the UK I occasionally ate a wagon wheel - it was a chewy biscuit type round cake/sweet bar. They were very popular among my school friends. Over time we realised that they were not the best thing to eat BUT I can still taste them when I think of them. I certainly wouldn't eat one now, I'm not even sure if they still make them.
Our memories for foods, tastes, music are quite in built and remain strong.
Real food does has nutritive value.
All the best Jan
I also remember Wagon Wheels, like big oreo cookie. Those were store bought, so there were not around often. Both mother and maternal grandma were fine cooks, on those farmsteads. Either place, there was a lot of food, any time of day. The kitchens never closed. Those farms ran on food.
ReplyDelete