News If Sugar Is so Bad for Us, Why Is the Sugar in Fruit Ok?

45-hours nutrition class in university. Please tell me more about the "false information" - I'll be sure to let the chemistry department and the PhD teacher know the great, not-at-all-retarded Boingyman on the internet has spoken and knows better than they do.
I can tell you as a nutrition professional that although many of the things you said is true, what you said has a lot of inaccurate information or half truths. This is coming from someone with significant schooling and experience in the field of nutrition.
 
After I do some complicated work, I feel really hungry. I remember a Japanese drama about this genius police lab tech said something about your brain needs sugar.
It needs a constant supply of simple sugar. I think glucose is the preferred fuel.
 
Whole fruits are a great source of nutrients like fiber and hardly have enough fructose to do any harm.

We hear regularly from health organisations and experts that we should eat less sugar. But we’re also told we should eat more fruit.

All types of sugar will give us the same amount of calories, whether they are from fruit or soft drink. But the health risks of eating sugar are related to consuming too many “free sugars” in the diet, not from eating sugars that are naturally present in fruits or milk.

Types of Sugar in Food
Sugar in food and drinks comes in various forms. Sugar molecules are classified as monosaccharides (single sugar molecules such as glucose and fructose) and disaccharides (more complex structures such as sucrose and lactose).

Fruit contains natural sugars, which are a mix of sucrose, fructose and glucose. Many people have heard that sugar is bad, and think that this must also therefore apply to fruits.

But fructose is only harmful in excess amounts, and not when it comes from fruit. It would be incredibly difficult to consume excessive amounts of fructose by eating whole fruits.

It’s much easier to consume excess sugar from foods and drinks that contain “free sugars”.

Free sugars include these same sugars (fructose, glucose, sucrose), but in this case they have been removed from their naturally occurring source (rather than being eaten as natural parts of fruits, dairy products, and some vegetables and grains). This includes sugar that is added to food and drinks by food companies, cooks or consumers.

Health Risks Come From Free Sugars, Not Fruits
Evidence shows that the health risks from sugars, such as tooth decay and unhealthy weight gain, are related to consuming too many free sugars in the diet, not from eating sugars that are naturally present in fruits or milk.

For this reason it is recommended that no more than 10 percent of your daily calories come from free sugars. For the average adult, this is about 50g or only slightly more than the amount of sugar in a can of regular soft drink or soda. It’s estimated that Australians get around 60 percent (65g) of their sugar intake from free sugars.

Foods that are sources of free sugars, such as juices, soft drinks, biscuits and lollies, are often high in calories and have little other nutritional value. It is often easy to consume more of them compared with fresh fruit and they also may be replacing other nutritious foods in the diet.

Consider a bottle of fruit juice – you would have to eat six whole oranges to get the same amount of sugar you consume in the juice. And because the fruit is in juice form, it counts towards your daily limit of free sugars.

Calories from drinks that contain sugar often become an addition to the calories you are eating from food, which may lead to weight gain over time.

Eating large amounts of dried fruit is also not a good idea if you are limiting your sugar intake. Through the process of removing water from the fruit, nutrients are concentrated, such that dried apricots, for example, contain about six times as much sugar (40g per 100g) as fresh apricots (6g per 100g).

We Need to Eat Fruit
Unlike many foods that are high in free sugars, fruits are packaged with lots of nutrients that help provide us with a balanced diet for good health.

For starters, fruit is an excellent source of fibre. An average banana will provide 20-25 percent (6g) of your recommended daily fibre intake. Getting enough fibre in the diet is important for protecting against bowel cancer. There is clear room for improvement in our fibre intake – adults in many countries consume only about half of the recommended amount each day (25g for Aussie women and 30g for Aussie men).

The fibre in fruit, which is often absent in many foods and drinks with free sugars, may also help to fill you up, which means you eat less overall at a meal. It’s not clear exactly why this is, but it could be related to the volume of the food (especially compared with liquids) and the chewing involved.

Fruit is also a good source of other nutrients such as potassium, which can help lower blood pressure, and flavonoids, which may reduce your risk of heart disease.

There is evidence that eating whole fruits (alone and in combination with vegetables) reduces your chances of dying from cancer, obesity and heart disease.

Despite this, only about 50 percent of Australians eat at least two pieces of fruit per day.

Most national dietary guidelines encourage eating fruits and vegetables, with an emphasis on the vegetables. To try and eat your recommended two pieces of fruit per day remember that a piece could be a banana, apple or orange, or two smaller fruits like plums or apricots, or a cup of grapes or berries.

When it comes to other sources of sugars, try to choose foods that have little or no sugar listed in the ingredient list, and drink water instead of sugary beverages when you are thirsty.

Kacie Dickinson is an Accredited Practicing Dietitian and a Lecturer in Nutrition and Dietetics at Flinders University.

Jodi Bernstein is a PhD Candidate in Nutritional Sciences at the University of Toronto.

https://getpocket.com/explore/item/...he-sugar-in-fruit-ok?utm_source=pocket-newtab

There are good things in various fruits that can actually benefit you. Also there's reason people in the know will tell you to keep your fruit consumption earlier in the day and not to over eat it.

Eating a chocolate bar is in no way similar to eating a bowl of blueberries. Processed foods are pretty much junk, and things like sour keys and snickers are literally empty calories with waaay too much concentrated sugar for one serving.

It's as simple as checking the nutritional value of the food you are eating. You really shouldn't surpass 25-30 grams of sugar a day, so one can of coke already exceeds that amount. The excess sugar your body can't break down turns to fat. So eating large amounts of sugar in any form isn't good for you, but there is certainly a difference in the foods you get the sugar from and the times you eat it.
 
I eat fruit everyday, and I prefer crunchy fruits that are not sweet. So my go to fruits are granny smith apples, green grapes that are not ripe, starfruitl

The thing people need to understand is that most of the fruit you buy in the market have been genetically modified, at the very least by cross planting, to make them more palatable most commonly increasing sweetness or size. So don't go HAM eating bananas or watermeons thinking it's just fruit and won't make you fat.
 
Unlike junk food, fruit isn't empty calories. And it's voluminous, making it difficult to eat so much of it that you turn into Lizzo. Even if you do eat so much fruit that you gain a bit of weight, you'll also be filling your system with plenty of other good stuff.

Cans of regular Pepsi, Twinkies, Skittles, chocolate bars, all that other shit and you just pollute your system and turn into Lizzo.

Pretty much this. If people don't know the difference between the sugar from fruit vs high fructose corn syrup and sugar cane then they are destined to be fat and unhealthy.

Fruit has fiber and vitamins and all sorts of nutrients. Ya, you shouldn't just eat fruit nonstop as it is high in natural sugars. But you can't compare it to pepsi, skittles, chocolate, etc. They contain no nutritional value.
 
My favorite thing about sugar is that it keeps people fat so I look better by comparison.
 
And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.

— Genesis 3:4–5
Desiring this wisdom, the woman eats the forbidden fruit and gives some to the man who also eats it. They become aware of their "nakedness" and make fig-leaf clothes, and hide themselves when God approaches. God curses the serpent, the woman then the man, and expels the man and woman from the Garden and thereby from eternal life.
 
Table sugar (sucrose) is a disaccharide made of glucose + fructose. Digestive enzymes break the bond between the two molecules. Glucose can be used by all the cells in the body. However cells can't use fructose, it can only be sent to the liver. The liver has a limited capacity to process fructose. First it tops off glycogen stores (if not already full), and then the excess is transformed directly into fat through lipogenesis. Triglycerides produced are then stored in liver (fatty liver), which causes insulin resistance on the long term and more is sent through blood circulation causing a rise in LDL cholesterol (the lipoprotein responsible for the transport of triglycerides and cholesterol which can deposit in the arteries).

Fruits contain fiber and water that slow down digestion. So their overall impact on blood sugar is negligible. You don't get the immediately lipogenesis that table sugar provokes, and also not the insulin spike. But it depends on the glycemic load of the particular fruit. Ignore glycemic index because it doesn't take it account typical portion sizes and fiber + water content. For instance watermelon has a high GI, but it's actually it's one the best GL fruits because of the very high water content.
Nothing beats fresh made watermelon juice with ice cubs during summer time or after an intense workout. Some people add a mint leaf to it
 
Grizzly Bears favorite food is honey, which is pure sugar, their 2nd favorite food is Berries which also contain a lot of sugar. They don't even eat a lot of meat, only sometimes they do. But they go crazy for honey... and they are JACKED!!!!! super jacked, 900 Ibs + of pure muscle.

When I went to the zoo I saw a adult male Grizzly Bear and the muscles in it were shocking, you could see how jacked it was, and I was talking to one of the staff and asked what the hell do you feed it and she said oh 90% honey and berries. I was like no horsemeat? and she said hahaha no certainly not, sometimes fish and chicken but they often don't finish it and just leave it
 
Grizzly Bears favorite food is honey, which is pure sugar, their 2nd favorite food is Berries which also contain a lot of sugar. They don't even eat a lot of meat, only sometimes they do. But they go crazy for honey... and they are JACKED!!!!! super jacked, 900 Ibs + of pure muscle.

When I went to the zoo I saw a adult male Grizzly Bear and the muscles in it were shocking, you could see how jacked it was, and I was talking to one of the staff and asked what the hell do you feed it and she said oh 90% honey and berries. I was like no horsemeat? and she said hahaha no certainly not, sometimes fish and chicken but they often don't finish it and just leave it
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This crap again?

Dude.. you are insecure and annoying as fuck.

You are like a jehova witness
 
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