You can buy quick cook steel cut oats. We make that almost every day. |
| Omg the latest fad. |
It's not a fad. Most of the world has never (and still doesn't) consume the ultra processed stuff the way we do in the US. I grew up in a different country and even though we were poor we ate much, much healthier. My mom and grandmother made most of the stuff from scratch out of necessity. |
I'm the one who said it takes less than 5 and I stand by it. I make steel cut oats every single morning. Boil the water, toss the oats in, feed the dog and maybe wash a pot or two from the night before. Boom! Oats done. |
If prepping veggies is hard, I don't know what to tell you. |
Ok, explain how chopping veggies is left effort than opening a bag of Doritos. Make sure to include the part where it is easier to buy, store and keep fresh produce on hand. You’ll solve the obesity crisis. Can’t wait to hear your Nobel winning explanation. |
People are talking about "ultra processed foods," which have generally been defined as foods with ingredients that would not be used in a home kitchen (such as foods loaded up with additives, preservatives, fake sweeteners, other chemical names rather than food descriptors). Typically if you can recognize the names of ingredients, the item is not considered UPF. That said, I think a more tenable goal is to reduce, rather than entirely eliminate, UPFs. |
Velveta and American cheese are ultra processed. Cream cheese is processed. Velveta and American cheese have emulsifiers to help with texture. |
I think any cheese that doesn't have to be labeled "cheese product" is fine. |
I mean, if you're so lazy that you're not willing to put in a couple of minutes of work, you'll remain unhealthy. No skin off my nose. But that still doesn't make them difficult. If you want to throw money at the problem, buy pre-cut. |
I'm intrigued by this conversation because as a home cook who cooks 95% of what I eat with next to no takeaways and restaurant meals, and who proactively eats a healthy diet with plenty of greens and vegetables, it's the default for me to approach the meal planning without thinking about reaching for the box of frozen packaged food from the freezer or whatever (though I still have the occasional frozen pizza). But that does not translate into OMG must bake my own breads and crackers and eat lentil soups and steel cut oats or I'll never have healthy skin and will die prematurely of heart disease! I've had plenty of lentils and steel cut oats, they're typically quite dreary, but more to the point, no, you don't have to eat them to have a healthy diet either. Ironically, some of the most unhealthy looking people I know are people who are obsessed with being vegan and cutting out any fats and processed foods in their diets. They look like waifs and drug addicts, certainly not people with healthy glowing skins! |
I eat a ton of veggies and that’s how I know it takes effort to have them available. |
It is unhealthy to cut fats and nutrients out of your diet. Vegan/low-fat is not the same as whole/unprocessed. It sounds like eating mostly unprocessed is working for you, which is good. If you are healthy then I would keep doing what you are doing. Often when people have already tipped into metabolic disarray or systemic inflammation, they would benefit from being more extreme for a while to correct those problems. Research supports this. And…glowing skin is not in itself a reason to eat healthy. The point is that many people see reduced inflammation when they cut out processed foods. It can be seen in improved skin but that is literally just the surface. It is an indicator that positive changes have occurred. |
| Make your own brioche buns. I do it every week and it's easy with a zojirushi breadmachine to do half the work. Stop eating deli meat--have a salad or a cup of veg soup, or some yoghurt with granola. Easy peasy. |
No self-respecting southerner eats instant grits! |