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Thread: Five Ways to Eat Better

  1. #11
    Quote Originally Posted by mortac8
    Na, it's 43g fiber per 100grams (250 calories) for the AllBran.

    AllBran is the fiber winner.
    Still doesn't contain any naturally occurring vitamins or minerals like an apple does. So in that respect, it's the loser. If one wants additional fiber, order some psyllium husk and take that. Fiber without all the crap in cereals (even All-Bran).

  2. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by SK12879
    Still doesn't contain any naturally occurring vitamins or minerals like an apple does. So in that respect, it's the loser. If one wants additional fiber, order some psyllium husk and take that. Fiber without all the crap in cereals (even All-Bran).
    No crap in All-Bran, more like lots of All-Bran in crap.........

  3. #13
    Member
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    so the equation looks like: All-Bran + multi-vitamin = 8 x apple.

    I'd still go with the apple. In my opinion, All-Bran is a SUPPLEMENT, not a SUBSTITUTE.
    And if you ate the damn apple in the first place you wouldn't need the supplement.

    TNT

  4. #14
    Ever heard of acid/base-balance? With fruit and veggies you will contribute to better buffering of blood (and also improved health) whereas cereal grains have the opposite effect. How about antinutrients in cereal grains? E.g. phytates ensure you won't absorb more than 30% of the vitamins in cereals and there aren't much in the first place. Still going for all-bran?

  5. #15
    Ok the guy who eats allbran and the guy who hates it both list your track pbs now.

  6. #16
    Quote Originally Posted by SK12879
    Because unfortunately, more is spent to market a single cereal (pick one) than the entire marketing budget of the "5-a-day fruit/veggie" campaign.....by a factor of 50 or more. Fruits and vegetables are non-value add products....why does it cost more to buy a watermelon that has been cut for you than to buy the same quantity of whole watermelon? Value-add. Cook it, cut it, dry it, flavor it....all value-add. Corn costs less than corn chips or Kellogg's Corn Flakes for the same reason. Because the manufacturers (farmers) make so much less money than the corporations, they simply CAN'T market their healthy products to that extreme.
    Thats right mate
    People should eat more veg and less nonsense food; its got naff all to do with sprint times and more to do with a healthier life.
    The amount of misinformation touted as fact from the food corparations is overwhelming..i feel sorry for kids; they have been brain-washed into thinking that processed non-food, devoid of nutrition and chock full of additives is actually good for them.
    Theres a saying..if you can't pick it, grow it or catch it than don't eat it!
    Difficult i know..but something to bear in mind.

  7. #17
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    1. Do not skip breakfast.

    2. Front load your calorie intake for the day (related to point 1). Many people skip or eat very little for breakfast (e.g. toast and coffee) and maybe an okay lunch and then gorge themselves at dinner, which is completely ass backwards.

    3. Eat a variety of foods. Rather than getting hung up on which foods are ideal or detrimental, work as many foods through the rotation as you can. This is a lot harder than it sounds. I read an article about 10-12 years ago that stated most Americans only eat about a dozen different foods on a regular basis. I think this is even more of a problem for athletes and bodybuilders because they get so hung up on finding the "perfect diet" or perfect foods, they end up eating the same things all the time, which is not going to provide you with an ideal nutrient intake. A few key staples are good, but work in a lot of variety around those staples.

    4. Concentrate on quality not quantity. Though it can be done to some extent, I don't think nutrition lends itself to quantification very easily. Moreover, I think the marginal benefit of calculating exact calories and macronutrient ratios is far outweighed by the marginal effort required to make those calculations every day. If you concentrate on the quality of the foods you eat, the quantities will tend to fall in place on their own. Relating back to point 3, I also thinks it's better to let the total calories and macronutrient ratios fluctutate somewhat from day to day.

    5. Avoid refined carbohydrates and vegetable cooking oils. A little now and then won't make much of a difference if you're eating a variety of foods, but try to avoid them as much as possible.

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