Chemistry Experiments Disguised as Food

It’s not always easy to figure out what’s food and what’s manufactured calories. Some items have the best names, names that make it seem as if the product is definitely food, and quite nourishing at that. So I didn’t realize that Nutrigrain bars had 52 ingredients until someone pointed it out to me. That’s not food, that’s a chemistry experiment.

The next time I was in the supermarket, I took a look at the ingredient list to confirm the observation. I also observed that eight (eight!) of those ingredients were different names for sugar. My best guess is that if they were required to integrate the ingredients in the CRUST and FILLING instead of listing them separately as they do, then sugar would be the first ingredient and people would be less inclined to think of the product as nourishing. The marketing team developed a great name for this chemistry experiment, but that’s where the attraction ends.

Here is an actual ingredient list for blueberry Nutrigrain bars so you can see for yourself what I’m talking about. The first and only time the word blueberry appears in the ingredient list is at number 41 (of 52). The various kinds of names for sugar are in bold type. 

CRUST: Whole grain rolled oats, enriched flour (wheat flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamin mononitrate [Vitamin B1], riboflavin [vitamin B2], folic acid), whole wheat flour, sunflower and/or soybean oil with TBHQ for freshness, high fructose corn syrup, sugar, honey, dextrose, calcium carbonate, soluble corn fiber, nonfat dry milk, wheat bran, salt, cellulose, potassium bicarbonate (leavening), natural and artificial flavor, mono- and diglycerides, propylene glycol esters of fatty acids, soy lecithin, wheat gluten, niacinamide, sodium sterol lactylate, Vitamin A palmitate, carrageenan, zinc oxide, reduced iron, guar gym, pyridoxine hydrochloride (Vitamin B6), thiamine hydrochloride (vitamin B1), riboflavin (vitamin B2), folic acid.

FILLING: High fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, blueberry puree concentrate, glycerin, sugar, water, sodium alginate, modified corn starch, natural and artificial flavor, citric acid, methylcellulose, calcium phosphate, malic acid, red #40, blue #1.

I am not the only one who’s noticed how nutritionally bankrupt these products are. There are plenty of great “breakfast bar” and “granola bar” recipes on line if you’re so inclined and, if not, then you can buy Lara bars, which have an ingredient list that looks something this: dates, peanuts, cashews.

Here is how you know if it’s food:

#1 You can find all the ingredients for sale in a grocery store;
#2 You can make it, or a close facsimile, by yourself if you want; and
#3 A six-year-old can pronounce all the ingredients.

Lastly, I found a nice recipe for homemade granola bars at Love & Lemons. It’s made with peanut (or cashew) butter, rolled oats, honey, vanilla extract, pumpkin seeds (or peanuts), sea salt, and miniature chocolate chips. That’s all. I’m going to make a batch to take on our family vacation.


A Quantity of Commodities

Some time ago, Michael Ruhlman lent me a book by Chef Dan Barber called The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food. It took me a long time to get through the book, primarily because it made me think so hard that I could read barely one chapter at a time. In 2009, the same year I started writing Your Health is on Your Plate, TIME Magazine named Dan Barber as one of the 100 most influential people in the world.

Third Plate got me thinking about the fact that mainstream America survives not on nutritious food but, instead, on a commodity-based diet. When goods and services are traded on the grand scale for other goods and services, they become commodities. The primary characteristic of a commodity is that its price is determined not by quality but, rather, quantity. A commodity meets explicit contractual requirements unrelated to the product’s nutritive value or taste, so that the source and nutritional quality of the product become, essentially, irrelevant. Commodities from different producers are of more-or-less uniform quality and, therefore, considered equivalent. Food-based commodities include white flour, sugar, soybean oil, degerminated corn meal, corn syrup, and corn starch. Other kinds of commodities include coal, gold, silver, iron ore, and aluminum.

We grow commodities, eat them, export them and feed them to animals. We modify them to reduce their nutritional value, and use words like “enriched” or “fortified” when anemia (iron), beri-beri (thiamine), and spina bifida (folate) lead to Congressionally-mandated replacement of nutrients whose removal caused those epidemics. The short cuts created by commodity-based eating have also manifested in a worldwide epidemic of a different sort of malnutrition than seen before, the most visible symptom of which is obesity.

This is a major frameshift in how to think about food. Ask yourself if your meal is nourishing or entertaining. If you aren’t sure, consider the possibility that even though it is edible, it may not be food. Michael Pollan calls these items “food-like.” That doesn’t mean you should never eat them. It means they don’t go in the plus category.

The opposite of commodity is “terroir,” a concept that describes a food so profoundly influenced by its origin that its location is an integral part of its identity. Words like terroir [French], territory and terrain [English] and tierra [Spanish] derive from the Latin terra, or earth. Components of terroir include climate, soil type, elevation, landscape, and even other plants growing nearby. The food grown here simply could not come from anywhere else. Terroir is about quality-over-quantity; it cannot be duplicated.

The identities of heirloom tomatoes, heritage wheat, chocolate, cognac, champagne, oolong tea, Iberian ham, hops and Parmigiana cheese are linked intimately to their places of origin. An attempt to grow or create the identical product elsewhere could never be successful. It’s about the angle of the sun, the direction of the rain, characteristics of the soil, the oak that grows there, and the acorns it produces to feed the pigs or geese who live in that one corner of Earth.

Terroir is a joy, an occasion, a memory. It would be unusual for most people to have access to this kind of quality on a daily basis. But the concept does help to explain why commodities are less likely to be a quality product. How could they be?

To the extent that you can decrease the quantity of commodities you eat—as ultra processed wheat, soy, corn and rice—and replace them with food for which quality is a higher priority, you can expect to reap the benefits.


Your Healthy Grocery Cart

The other day, a thought crossed my mind. Maybe we’re focused on the wrong part of the equation: Maybe the time for constructive decision-making about what we eat is not when it’s time to prepare the food, but when it’s time to purchase the food. Waiting until you’re hungry for dinner is like chasing a horse after it’s left the barn. That’s why I want to start this conversation by examining the standard shopping cart. Continue reading


Big Food: The Industrialization of What You Eat

What does it mean to be nourished? The word nutrition, related to “nourish,” comes from nutrire (Latin), meaning to feed, support, nurture, and also nurse. “Food,” from foda (Old English), is related to “fodder” and “feed,” and means nourishment or fuel. The purpose of food is to nourish. There is a fair bit of controversy about what constitutes good nutrition, but most successful strategies recommend increasing high-fiber foods like produce, legumes, and whole grains, while simultaneously decreasing ultraprocessed items like chips, commercially baked items, and “fast” food.  Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Lentil Soup with a Splash

I’ve come across a really good and relatively simple recipe for lentil soup, and thought I’d share it right away before I misplace it! I wish I knew where I got it from, but that information will sadly have to wait until I figure it out and can add it to this post. I made this recipe for the first time on a rainy day in early spring a few weeks back, and was so pleased with the results that I decided to write a post about it. Lentils are a special food, a special type of legume, with all kinds of important benefits for your health. And they taste good. Continue reading


The Trouble With Angel Food Cake

Have you ever worked with someone whose actions made you hear your mom’s voice inside your head saying things like “Everyone gets a turn,” or even “Let’s be nice”? When my friend Dee’s kids complained about the seemingly unjust behavior of certain teachers or neighbors, she would suggest they consider them “negative role models.” Just as it’s important to have good examples in your life, it’s also valuable to have examples of behaviors you would rather avoid.

Year in and year out, I post recipes that have a lot going for them. I am always on the lookout for good examples of nourishing recipes made from whole foodstuffs, with plenty of produce, legumes, nourishing fats, and high-quality protein. Today I am trying a different approach: I am dissecting a recipe that has nothing going for it. This angel food cake mix is a negative role model. Its best use is as an example of what not to eat. Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Grains and Greens

This is a recipe that features the grain you feel like eating today*, the greens that are in season, and whatever vegetables you are in the mood to sautè. For this particular version, I chose quinoa, red peppers, and spinach, but you can saunter through your kitchen, gather up your choices, and start chopping. If you get your veggies organized, and do your chopping early in the day, you’ll be able to throw this meal together quickly. And if you make the grains the evening or weekend before, you’ll feel like a pro when everything comes together in just a few minutes. Continue reading


Stripped Carbs and White Powder

Have you ever thought about the fact that white flour, potato starch, confectioner’s sugar, and corn starch look remarkably similar, essentially identical? They have all been converted to a pile of white powder. What these examples have in common is that they have been ultraprocessed in such a way as to change their unique individual identities until all that remains, in each case, is a pile of stripped carbohydrate.  Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Spiced Pumpkin Seeds

This recipe made its way into my house in a booklet provided by Vitamix with the purchase of our high-speed blender many years ago. It is really delicious whether all by itself, sprinkled over a circle of warm brie, or tossed onto a tomato salad. Pumpkin seeds are a great substitute for nuts when you are feeding people with nut allergies, but they are also extremely nourishing in and of themselves, and worth the time you spend making them. 

Over the years I have collected plenty of recipes for sweet spiced nuts and seeds, but this is the only recipe I have for a savory version.  Continue reading


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Grain Bowls, Your Way

I figured I would share some strategies for grain bowls.

Start by choosing a grain. It could be something as simple as rolled oats, but it might also be something slightly more adventurous—like steel-cut oats or millet or even the brown rice left over from last night’s dinner. I happen to be a fan of kasha, a nutty tasting grain also known as buckwheat groats, and which my family ate often when I was growing up.  Continue reading