Guidelines on
nutrition are issued by trusted health experts. Some make sense, like the 'Eat
5 portions of fruit and vegetables every day' guideline. Fruit and vegetables
are sources of minerals, vitamins and antioxidants.
Some guidelines
however, can be misleading. For example, when in 1987 the UK government asked
medical experts to come up with a safe alcohol consumption limit, nobody could
because no studies had been done.
An arbitrary safe
figure of 21 units per week for men and 14 for women was arrived
at, but these were simply plucked out of thin air.
In 2016, a panel of
experts downgraded this figure to 14 units per week for both
sexes. Some panel members were found to represent the Temperance Society and
anti-alcohol lobbies. The drinks industry was never consulted.
Do you smell a rat?
Are there any
guidelines for damaging fructose consumption? There are none. Fructose
is as bad for the liver as alcohol, if not worse.
What if everyone who
eats processed foods (most of us) have damaged livers because of excessive
fructose intake? If so, then what if alcohol consumption just simply compounds
the problem?
Without fructose,
maybe alcohol consumption actually makes no difference? It never did in days
gone by.
Alcohol consumption
in the UK has fallen over the last two decades, yet liver damage is in on the
increase. A high fructose diet seems to be the culprit.
Expect no fructose
guidelines to emerge soon because the food industry will not allow. Profits are
more important.
Sensible Nutrition
Guidelines
There are three
nutritional guidelines which ought to help prevent the obesity crisis
worsening:
1. Restrict
non-fibrous carbohydrate intake.
Good carbohydrate
foods contain dietary fibre. These are vegetables like cabbage, Brussels
sprouts, kale, broccoli, etc. They fill the stomach and contain essential
minerals and vitamins. The dietary fibre is converted to short-chain fatty
acids which help the body to burn fat.
Potatoes are a source
of vitamin C and minerals, but should be eaten sparingly because the starch
they contain raises blood pressure.
However, cooking and
then chilling potatoes for use in salads produces resistant starch. That
reduces the blood sugar-raising effect.
2. Restrict Fructose
Consumption
Cease fructose
intake. Read the labels. Fructose is present in processed foods and is
harmful to health.
Eat no more than 25
grams of fructose a day.
All refined
carbohydrates turn to sugar and may cause insulin resistance, which is
behind chronic illnesses such as obesity.
3. Replace
Unsaturated Fats with Healthy Saturated Fats
Instead of relying on
non-dietary fiber carbohydrates like sucrose and fructose - healthy saturated
fats present in coconut oil, olive oil, butter from grass-fed cows, raw
nuts, organic-pastured eggs, avocados, etc, are sources of long-lasting energy.
Even pastured meat
fat like lard is fine.
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