9 Scariest food facts

Alyssa Rose

Official Checked Star Member
I always knew that nutritious foods were more expensive but I had no clue the difference was this great! It's absolutely ridiculous! :hairpull:

Grapes are my most favorite food and I always end up spending 5-7 dollars on a bag of them that usually lasts me 3 days at best. What foods do you enjoy that are on the more expensive side?

1. Nutritious food costs 10 times more than junk food.
University of Washington researchers calculated the cost discrepancy between healthy food and junk foods and found that 2,000 calories of junk food rings up at a measly $3.52 a day. Yet for 2,000 calories of nutritious grub, the researchers plunked down $36.

Article
 

StanScratch

My Penis Is Dancing!
I **** to say this, but I found none surprising. I know I am spending more on health foods, but really, I am spending less.
In getting junk foods, one is buying a lot of empty nutrients. Of course, our body needs certain nutrients, and tries to tell us in various ways (ie, cravings). For instance, our body might be lacking in potassium. If our main dietary intake of potassium is through potato chips, we begin a potato chip craving. However, in reality, most bagged potato chips contain more crap than actual potato, so we are actually getting little of the potassium that we need...so we eat more chips, instead filling ourselves up with more fat than the nutrients our body truly needs. And, instead of spending a couple of bucks on a healthy, pure, home grown potato, we find ourselves spending a lot more on bags of chips - and paying for it with our health, as well.
So, it might SEEM like eating healthy is more expensive, but in the long run, it is a lot less expensive. I find myself personally spending less as I eat more organic and local, because these healthy foods are more adequately filling my dietary needs with much greater efficiency than fast foods and junk foods.

Number three gets me, as does the related number 5. Fruits, veggies and meats do have fewer nutrients today...if the consumer is not careful. Know where your fruits, veggies and meats come from. Know how they are grown, know how they are cared for. chickens and cows which are raised free to roam, rather than in what is basically a agricultural prison, are apt to have a lot more nutrients. Plus, you can almost literally taste the happiness in a chicken raised free range, over a caged.
 
3. Fruits and vegetables are losing their nutrients.
According to the USDA, the fruits and vegetables we eat today may contain significantly fewer nutrients than those our grandparents ate. Researchers looked at 43 produce items and discovered drops in protein (6 percent), calcium (16 percent), iron (15 percent), riboflavin (38 percent), and vitamin C (20 percent). The only way to counter this trend: Eat more of them.
well ****
 

squallumz

knows petras secret: she farted.
fuck that, look at pet food.

see "****** digest" on the ingredients of the kibble or treats?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_digest

Any kind of ****** can be included: "4-D *******" (dead, diseased, disabled, or dying prior to slaughter), goats, pigs, horses, rats, miscellaneous roadkill, ******* euthanized at shelters, restaurant and supermarket refuse and so on

gross!
 

Kingfisher

Here Zombie, Zombie, Zombie...
I wish it was the other way around, junk food costs a lot, healthy food-cheap. But it's evident by all the overweight people in the U.S.
 
There are several ways to counteract this, but it requires effort.

Grow your own fruits and vegetables - don't have land? Join a community garden. There is space for everyone.

Find a famers' coop. Get milk and other dairy products there.

I buy almost nothing at the supermarket. There are good foods out there. The burden is on you to find them.
 

SpexyAshleigh

Official Checked Star Member
I **** to say this, but I found none surprising. I know I am spending more on health foods, but really, I am spending less.
In getting junk foods, one is buying a lot of empty nutrients. Of course, our body needs certain nutrients, and tries to tell us in various ways (ie, cravings). For instance, our body might be lacking in potassium. If our main dietary intake of potassium is through potato chips, we begin a potato chip craving. However, in reality, most bagged potato chips contain more crap than actual potato, so we are actually getting little of the potassium that we need...so we eat more chips, instead filling ourselves up with more fat than the nutrients our body truly needs. And, instead of spending a couple of bucks on a healthy, pure, home grown potato, we find ourselves spending a lot more on bags of chips - and paying for it with our health, as well.
So, it might SEEM like eating healthy is more expensive, but in the long run, it is a lot less expensive. I find myself personally spending less as I eat more organic and local, because these healthy foods are more adequately filling my dietary needs with much greater efficiency than fast foods and junk foods.

Number three gets me, as does the related number 5. Fruits, veggies and meats do have fewer nutrients today...if the consumer is not careful. Know where your fruits, veggies and meats come from. Know how they are grown, know how they are cared for. chickens and cows which are raised free to roam, rather than in what is basically a agricultural prison, are apt to have a lot more nutrients. Plus, you can almost literally taste the happiness in a chicken raised free range, over a caged.

This 100%...it IS possible to eat healthy on a budget, and you will benefit from it even more because local foods = cheaper than imported. Local foods=more nutrients than imported. Its all very simple but people complicate eating. 100 years ago, people grew their own crops, butchered their own ******* and worked so much harder to get their food yet people today act like its so damn hard to go to a local market and grab local produce instead of swinging by Mcd's. :rolleyes:
 

squallumz

knows petras secret: she farted.
the fact of the matter is, eating healthy, and actually truly healthy, is more costly.

its complete fucking bullshit, but its true.

crap **** food is produced in mass quantities, therefore, the price is much lower. organic and healthier options are less in demand and are produced much less, hence, high prices.

fucking pisses me off.
 

Alyssa Rose

Official Checked Star Member
:dunno:
All I know is I wish grapes were a penny a pound! :D
 

maildude

Postal Paranoiac
I find all of this dubious. I mean, if you believe the FDA and the experts who recommend eating so many servings of each type of food each day, we'd all have to eat all damn day long without stopping just to fulfill those nutritional requirements.
 

Jon S.

Banned
Actually, when you factor EVERYTHING into the equation, it's actually cheaper if you buy healthy things. It will likely lead to a longer life for you, greatly reduce the chances you will have a stroke or a heart ****** (I had one back in Oct. btw at the "ripe old age" of 38), and save you all the money associated with pills, and treating all of the ailments that stem from eating unhealthy garbage. In short, cheaper isn't always cheaper in the long run! When it comes to what you eat, that's certainly the case anyway! :2 cents:


Now, I love fresh fruit!!!!! Seedless grapes are one of the things that I love also. Since I basically love all fruit, I go with what's on sale, and I'm happy! Someone almost always has grapes on sale for 99 cents to $1.29/lb. I just bought some black seedless grapes on sale for $1.29/lb today at Albertsons &, as usual, they are DELICIOUS!!!!!!! :drool2:
 
I read recently in my area they have now given welfare recipients cards that are strictly for use at a number of local farmers markets.

What do I like? I'm a broccoli fiend but it's not very expensive. I love celeray as well but there aren't many nutrients in celery. Potatoes are great as well, but a big ass 6lb bag only costs a few dollars.

Tomatoes are the bomb. I grow my own but they haven't yielded much recently because I don't rotate. My folks have so many raspberry bushes it's crazy. They grow wild and with no maintenance. Those thing produce like crazy.
 

Supafly

Logged Off 4 Freedom of Speech Restrictions
Bronze Member
What bugs me is, food gets transported all across the world, instead of growing them locally.

Examples:

Crabs from the Northern Sea get flown over to Africa, or driven to Poland, shelled there, and transported back.

Potatoes, I was at a nearby discount market, and checked the potatoes. They are imported from Israel... I mean, Germany is a classic country for growing them, why do we do this???
 
Same thing with water and soda. A bottle of Sierra Mist costs 75 cents at a vending machine, while bottled water costs a buck fifty.
 

Petra

Cult ****** and Simpering Cunt
There are several ways to counteract this, but it requires effort.

Grow your own fruits and vegetables - don't have land? Join a community garden. There is space for everyone.

Find a famers' coop. Get milk and other dairy products there.

I buy almost nothing at the supermarket. There are good foods out there. The burden is on you to find them.

Usually this is true, but I'm finding this year that weather plays a HUGE factor into growing stuff yourself. o_O Maybe next year since the only thing that's liking the weather right now are the green courgettes.
 

emceeemcee

Banned
You can save money by not eating vegetables, there are some good reasons to believe that they probably do more harm than good.

When you factor in the cost of hospital bills and ************ ***** you'll need to take from years of eating junk, real food isn't too expensive.
 
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