-
Fast Food
So over the past couple of weeks I've been asking myself what exactly is so bad about fast food (at least for someone who is trying to bulk). All that I've been able to come up with is that fast food is so unhealthy because the food is loaded sodium and lacks many micronutrients. Can anyone enlighten me moreso? Thanks
Also, what [b]exactly[/b] is the grease in fast food. How is the grease in fast food different from other liquid fats such as canola oil or vegetable oil? Is the main difference just different micronutrients or is it something more?
A couple of weeks ago I saw this posted:
[Quote]The proteins in some fast food are absolutely valueless to your body. [/quote]
Is that true?
-
[QUOTE=Virus4762;786079023]what [b]exactly[/b] is the grease in fast food. [/QUOTE]You realize that "fast food" is not one specific food, right?
-
I assumed the greases in different fast foods weren't that different from each other.
-
most of the food is fried, altering the oil which has negative health effects (especially in the bread products)
as for the proteins, depends what place... taco bell uses a lot of fillers to mimic meat
-
[QUOTE=Virus4762;786087613]I assumed the greases in different fast foods weren't that different from each other.[/QUOTE]Interesting perspective.
McDonald's hamburger patties are 100% USDA Grade A beef and they're cooked with no added oils or other fats whatsoever. So do you want to extrapolate from one datapoint that almost all "fast food" is cooked without any added oils or fats?
And did you really think that every forum of "fast food" contains about the same ingredients?
-
[QUOTE=WonderPug;786093063]Interesting perspective.
McDonald's hamburger patties are 100% USDA Grade A beef and they're cooked with no added oils or other fats whatsoever. So do you want to extrapolate from one datapoint that almost all "fast food" is cooked without any added oils or fats?
And did you really think that every forum of "fast food" contains about the same ingredients?[/QUOTE]
I'm pretty sure wendy's spicy chicken is the same thing as a nachos supreme from taco bell
-
Cause it contains massive amount of sat/trans fats, just one of the reason i think
-
I consider it "bad" typically because it is usually very calorie dense, and sometimes has a high fat/carbs to protein ratio. If I want to get full at Wendy's or culvers, we are talking about 2500 calories, minimum, whereas eating whole foods(like oatmeal, eggs, etc) I barely can get in 700 calories in the morning when I eat that for breakfast.
-
[QUOTE=TravkinK;786171693]Cause it contains massive amount of sat/trans fats, just one of the reason i think[/QUOTE]
Evil sat fats.....................
-
The chicken I buy: 100% all natural chicken breast
Mcdonalds:Chicken Selects® Premium Breast Strip:
Chicken breast strips with rib meat, water, seasoning [potato starch, salt, autolyzed yeast extract, maltodextrin, chicken broth, natural flavors (plant and animal
source), spice, chicken fat, sunflower lecithin], sodium phosphates. Battered and breaded with: wheat flour, water, food starch-modified, leavening (baking soda,
sodium aluminum phosphate, monocalcium phosphate, sodium acid pyrophosphate), spices, salt, modified cellulose gum, wheat gluten, garlic powder, onion powder,
soybean oil, xanthan gum, spice extractives, extractives of paprika (color).
Chicken, water, salt, sodium phosphates. Battered and breaded with: bleached wheat flour, water, wheat flour, food starch-modified, salt, spices, wheat gluten,
paprika, dextrose, yeast, garlic powder,[B] partially hydrogenated soybean oil and cottonseed oil with mono -and diglycerides[/B], leavening (sodium acid pyrophosphate,
baking soda, ammonium bicarbonate, monocalcium phosphate), natural flavor (plant source) with extractives of paprika. Prepared in vegetable oil (Canola oil, corn
oil, soybean oil, hydrogenated soybean oil with TBHQ and citric acid added to preserve freshness). Dimethylpolysiloxane added as an antifoaming agent.
CONTAINS: WHEAT.
Prepared in vegetable oil (Canola oil, corn oil, soybean oil, [B]hydrogenated soybean oil[/B] with TBHQ and citric acid added to preserve freshness). Dimethylpolysiloxane
added as an antifoaming agent.
-
"The proteins in some fast food are absolutely valueless to your body."
Am also interested in whether or not that is true.