US Americans don’t care if food is ‘processed’ — if it’s cheap: poll

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Americans don’t care if food is ‘processed’ — if it’s cheap: poll​

The average American spends $67 on processed foods every week, according to a recent survey.

The poll asked 2,000 respondents about their experiences with buying both “natural” and “processed” goods at the grocery store and found that the average weekly grocery bill amounts to $98.50.

Of this, the average person believes that 32% of their diet is made of natural ingredients.

Conducted by OnePoll in partnership with NatureSweet, the survey also looked at what exactly Americans think “natural” and “processed” means.

When seeing the term “natural” on a food product, about half of those polled said they assume the product is made of all whole ingredients (51%) and that there won’t be any preservatives present (49%).

One in four (26%) also assume that “natural” food products are ultimately better for the environment.

Similarly, 65% believe that food products that claim to be “sustainable” were grown or produced in a way that benefits the environment.

By contrast, respondents said that when they don’t see the word “natural” on food packaging, they tend to think that the product must have chemicals in it (52%) or are likely to be processed (43%).

Forty-two percent said that they assume food that isn’t labeled “natural” is unhealthy, or even full of preservatives.

With all this in mind, it’s not surprising that 61% of respondents have actively sought out foods with fewer preservatives or processed ingredients within the last year.

They’ve also been reading the ingredient labels on food products more closely (60%), buying more “natural” foods (42%) and prioritizing locally-made or grown foods (24%).

“Opting for healthy snacks is easier now than ever before,” said Dr. Martin Ruebelt, chief scientific officer at NatureSweet. “Today’s markets offer fresh, ready-to-eat fruits and vegetables, neatly packaged for on-the-go convenience. These are delicious and nutritious alternatives to processed foods we often grab in a rush.”

Although the majority of Americans claim to care about how natural their food is (69%), where their food was grown (80%) and whether or not the people growing it were fairly paid (79%), the data also shows that other factors have a much greater impact.

More than half (55%) said that what matters most to them when buying food is the taste, almost twice as the number who cited where it’s grown (22%).

And another 66% of respondents said they don’t care where their food comes from as long as they can afford it.

When asked to choose between convenient processed food and harder-to-source natural food, one in four (25%) chose the former — but one in three (34%) said they’d choose the latter.

“Understanding the origin of your food is important to making informed purchasing and eating decisions,” emphasizes Dr. Ruebelt. “Reading the labels and learning about the company and its practices will reveal if their values align with yours. The tag ‘local’ alone doesn’t ensure food safety, employee welfare, or sustainable practices. It’s critical to delve deeper.”
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Just because something is processed doesn't make it unhealthy and just because something is natural doesn't make it healthy.
Yeah this. The problem isn't eating proccesed foods, the problem is eating exorbitant ammounts of them. Don Gorske literally eats nothing but big macs with them being 90% of his food intake for the past 50 years holding the world record (he's eaten like 30k big macs total), yet the dude is both thin and healthy as a horse at 70 years old because he eats normal (if not smaller than average) portions and is reasonably active in his daily life. His cholesterol level is literally below the average.

"Proccessed" Food isn't the problem, your portions and solitary life is.
 
Yeah this. The problem isn't eating proccesed foods, the problem is eating exorbitant ammounts of them. Don Gorske literally eats nothing but big macs with them being 90% of his food intake for the past 50 years holding the world record (he's eaten like 30k big macs total), yet the dude is both thin and healthy as a horse at 70 years old because he eats normal (if not smaller than average) portions and is reasonably active in his daily life. His cholesterol level is literally below the average.

"Proccessed" Food isn't the problem, your portions and solitary life is.
i mean as long as you follow calories in, calories out, you can can basically eat whatever you want. people are just much less active than they used to be. A good portion of jobs nowaday is just deskwork. You walk maybe a few minute from and to your car. sit all day. Even chores are much less arduous. Laundry is done automatically, dishes as well. Food is often ordered or rdy made because a lot of avrg adult nowaday dont even fucking know how to cook and even if they do cook we have tons of machine to help us (when the last time you knead dough?).
 
“Opting for healthy snacks is easier now than ever before,” said Dr. Martin Ruebelt, chief scientific officer at NatureSweet. “Today’s markets offer fresh, ready-to-eat fruits and vegetables, neatly packaged for on-the-go convenience. These are delicious and nutritious alternatives to processed foods we often grab in a rush.”
Or you could not snack at all. Unlike thirst indicating dehydration slight hunger does not indicate malnutrition or starvation.
 
I feel like the term processed food is too broad and general. Processed food can cover anything from frozen or canned vegetables to goyslop paste created entirely in a lab or factory and made out of nothing but chemicals.
 
Processing is neither good nor bad.

I recently found out that all the hype about brown rice is actually why rice arsenic toxicity is now an issue when it never was before. It's almost like those primitive people who started polishing the bran off their rice didn't do it because of white supremacy and hating nature like we were told. It's almost like probably the societies that processed food more did better and had fewer people dying of metal poisoning.

I think it's going to turn out that "ultra-processed" foods are health issues in large part because they add and evaporate water into the process over and over. Typically this water comes from sources that are contaminated with the usual pharmaceuticals and plastics. If you drank a big glass of that water, it wouldn't hurt you. But if you drink a big glass of a soda made using a syrup that came from adding and reducing water over and over again, you may be getting much more of the problem molecules than you could ever have gotten from a normal foodstuff.
 
It's hopeless and I laugh at all the soy blobs from inside of my lean, striated, robot body

Seriously though there's almost nothing good to buy in the grocery store, virtually all of the packaged or processed foods contain vegetable oil if not corn syrup, soy, and other unhealthy bullshit. The only way to avoid it entirely is to cook everything from scratch, and we know most people aren't doing that and never will while they have a choice.

There are a few snacks available that are made on butter if you look hard. Expect your grocery bill to go way up and your diet variety to go way down if you cut out all the poison. $100/week would be great. I spend that much just on fruits, vegetables, yogurt/dairy/cheese, and a few butter pastries.
 
I still remain unconvinced that "organic" or "non-GMO" food is anything but an upcharged placebo. Anything that comes from a farm or ranch is inherently unnatural.

I recall being so fascinated by a late night public radio program back around 2006 that was an abridged version of Michael Pollan's - The Omnivore's Dilemma.

It was a few part series based on his book contrasting factory farming to organic agriculture and animal husbandry. I actually went on and bought his book after listening to the podcast of the series several times.

His take was actually pretty evenhanded IIRC.

I remember that he specifically mocked "organic" gummy bears.

The take home messages as I remember them were

- there's not much evidence that organic food is any better for you nutritionally. But it probably tastes better when farmed at smaller scale and helps you sleep better at night.
- the USDA Organic label guarantee was already an example of regulatory capture back then, hence the gummy bears
- Whole Foods is full of shit

Even chores are much less arduous. Laundry is done automatically, dishes as well.

I can believe this about Victorian-era housewives.

But it still doesn't explain why post WW2 premenopausal women were all thin, such as the Mad Men era.

Maybe due to higher smoking rates causing appetite suppression?

Our mothers and grandmothers were industrious, but their women's work was more puddling rather than physically demanding.

Particularly the post-WW2 era with stay-at-home wives before women got called into the workforce to create the necessity of dual income homes.

It's universal looking at old family photos or old game shows that all the women are thin by today's standards.
 
Just because something is processed doesn't make it unhealthy and just because something is natural doesn't make it healthy.

Arsenic, uranium and asbestos are natural.
Doesn't mean you should eat them.
I love when people use this argument to keep smoking weed. "It comes from the earth as God and nature intended"

So do poisonous toadstools, but for some strange reason you don't see me rolling those into a joint.
 
No shit Americans care more about the cost of food than anything else, the economy is fucked. The price of my average grocery trip has doubled in the last three years. Buying a family sized box of cheez its and a 2L of mountain dew costs less than buying a middling cut of steak and a large onion. When you're on a working class salary, it becomes hard to not notice that the bag of rice you buy every month is slowly creeping up in price. Having enough money to pay your bills is more important than not eating processed slop.
 
I love when people use this argument to keep smoking weed. "It comes from the earth as God and nature intended"
Selectively breeding it, cultivating it, drying it and combusting it with flame is not how God intended. Unless they're eating raw ditchweed, their gay hippie weed is just as natural and God-approved as my superior heterosexual meth.
 
A good chunk of Americans are fucking retarded because of public schooling and media indoctrination. That being said though, they are picking up the cue that the elites want them to eat ze bugs and own nothing. And that is precisely why this 'poll' was made.
 
i mean as long as you follow calories in, calories out, you can can basically eat whatever you want.
Not true. For one example, if you eat a decent amount of protein and no fiber, you will shit once a week and it will feel like delivering a poop baby, and possibly develop fecal impaction (basically perma-constipation that requires medical attention.) The "only CICO matters" thing gets spread around as weight loss advice a lot, but for actually maintaining a healthy lifestyle (especially if you care about fitness) you really need to eat properly.
 
powerlevel because i just can't shut the fuck up when it comes to my personal life, but I used to not give a shit about eating processed foods until I started working out.

i try not to be a judgmental asshole when it came to working in fast food but the people who would enjoy the goyslop are the most out of shape, overweight people i've seen. not just fat, but fucking massive. seeing that every time i worked is a reminder that I need to stay in shape and not be a fat fuck. not surprised by this article and not surprised the fat whores that make articles saying "yeah i'm overweight but i'm still pretty though"
 
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