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esoterica
2005-11-04, 07:45 AM
By Dr. Joseph Mercola
with Rachael Droege

There are no "bad" foods, right? Only food you should eat in moderation? Well, not really. The following foods are so bad for your body that I really can’t see any reason to eat them. Not only do they have zero nutritional value, but they also give your body a healthy dose of toxins, which should make the idea of eating them really hard to swallow.

Doughnuts


Doughnuts are fried, full of sugar and white flour and most all varieties contain trans fat (http://www.mercola.com/2003/jul/19/trans_fat.htm). Store-bought doughnuts are made up of about 35 percent to 40 percent trans fat.

An average doughnut will give you about 200 to 300 calories, mostly from sugar (http://www.mercola.com/article/sugar/dangers_of_sugar.htm), and few other nutrients.

It’s too bad that Americans view doughnuts as a breakfast food as, nutritionally speaking, eating a doughnut is one of the worst ways to start off your day. It will throw off your blood sugar and won't stay with you so you'll be hungry again soon. You are better off eating no breakfast at all, or better yet grabbing a quick glass of Living Fuel (http://www.mercola.com/forms/livingfuel.htm).

Soda


One can of soda has about 10 teaspoons of sugar, 150 calories, 30 to 55 mg of caffeine, and is loaded with artificial food colors and sulphites. I can't think of any good reason to ever have it. The diet varieties are also problematic as they are filled with harmful artificial sweeteners like aspartame (http://www.mercola.com/article/aspartame/hidden_dangers.htm).

Studies have linked soda to osteoporosis, obesity, tooth decay and heart disease, yet the average American drinks an estimated 56 gallons of soft drinks each year. Plus, drinking all that sugar will likely suppress your appetite for healthy foods, which pave the way for nutrient deficiencies.

Soft drink consumption among children has almost doubled in the United States over the last decade, which is not surprising considering that most school hallways are lined with soda-filled vending machines.

Schools often make marketing deals with leading soft drink companies such as Coca-Cola from which they receive commissions--based on a percentage of sales at each school--and sometimes a lump-sum payment, in exchange for their students’ health. School vending machines can increase the consumption of sweetened beverages by up to 50 or more cans of soda per student per year.

If you routinely drink soda--regular or diet--eliminating it from your diet is one of the simplest and most profound health improvements you can make.

French Fries (and Nearly All Commercially Fried Foods)

Potatoes are bad enough when consumed in their raw state, as their simple sugars are rapidly converted to glucose that raises insulin levels (http://www.mercola.com/2001/jul/14/insulin.htm) and can devastate your health. But when they are cooked in trans fat at high temperatures, all sorts of interesting and very unpleasant things occur.

Anything that is fried, even vegetables, has the issue of trans fat (http://www.mercola.com/2003/jul/19/trans_fat.htm) and the potent cancer-causing substance acrylamide (http://www.mercola.com/2003/aug/2/acrylamide_cancer.htm).

Foods that are fried in vegetable oils like canola (http://www.mercola.com/2002/aug/14/con_ola1.htm), soybean, safflower, corn, and other seed and nut oils are particularly problematic. These polyunsaturated fats easily become rancid when exposed to oxygen and produce large amounts of damaging free radicals in the body. They are also very susceptible to heat-induced damage from cooking. What is not commonly known is that these oils can actually cause aging, clotting, inflammation, cancer and weight gain. You can read the article "Secrets of the Edible Oil Industry (http://www.mercola.com/2001/aug/1/oil.htm)" for more information.

It is theoretically possible to create a more "healthy" French fry if you cook it in a healthy fat like virgin coconut oil (http://www.mercola.com/forms/coconut_oil.htm). Due to its high saturated fat content (http://www.mercola.com/2002/aug/17/saturated_fat1.htm), coconut oil is extremely stable and is not damaged by the high temperatures of cooking. This is why coconut oil should be the only oil you use to cook with (http://www.mercola.com/2003/oct/15/cooking_oil.htm).

I am fond of telling patients that one French fry is worse for your health than one cigarette, so you may want to consider this before you order your next ‘Biggie’ order.

Chips


Most commercial chips, and this includes corn chips, potato chips, tortilla chips, you name it, are high in trans fat. Fortunately, some companies have caught on to the recent media blitz about the dangers of trans fat and have started to produce chips without trans fat.

However, the high temperatures used to cook them will potentially cause the formation of carcinogenic substances like acrylamide (http://www.mercola.com/2002/jul/3/fast_food.htm), and this risk remains even if the trans fat is removed.

Fried Non-Fish Seafood

This category represents the culmination of non-healthy aspects of food. Fried shrimp, clams, oysters, lobsters, and so on have all the issues of trans fat and acrylamide mentioned above, plus an added risk of mercury.

Seafood is loaded with toxic mercury (http://www.mercola.com/2003/jun/28/mercury_fish.htm) and shellfish (http://www.mercola.com/2002/aug/21/avoid_shellfish.htm) like shrimp and lobsters can be contaminated with parasites and resistant viruses that may not even be killed with high heat. These creatures, considered scavenger animals, consume foods that may be harmful for you.

Eating these foods gives you a quadruple dose of toxins--trans fat, acrylamide, mercury and possibly parasites or viruses--with every bite.

If you have a taste for seafood, there’s an easy solution. It’s best to avoid your local fish fry and try the only fish I now eat--the delicious wild red Alaskan salmon (http://www.mercola.com/forms/salmon.htm) that was proven through independent lab testing to be free of harmful levels of mercury and other contaminants.

nicki6
2005-11-04, 08:14 AM
Damn....I :love: every item on this list!!!:rofl:

SqrpioQutie
2005-11-04, 09:57 AM
the only thing that got me was the french fries... i eat the microwave fries with some cheese and salsa probably 3 - 4 times a week with a salad... don't know if i could give that up indefinitely because i literally crave my cheese fries...

StartinOvah
2005-11-04, 11:00 AM
i wish i never read this list....i heart fried anything!

metro_qt
2005-11-04, 01:39 PM
:( ooo. i just had a big ol plate of fries for lunch...
One fry worse than a cigarette eh?

JaneiR36
2005-11-06, 01:36 AM
"Sodi pop"!!! And I love both varieties (sugar-free and non). Diet Coke, and Schweppes Ginger Ale :love: I was doing pretty well until the Walmart here started carrying the ginger ale, too! :lol:

CandiceC
2005-11-06, 07:31 AM
No way I'm giving up the french fries!

MizAvalon
2005-11-06, 03:45 PM
I eat every single item on the list.

Why am I eating some cheese fries right now as I type this? :(

Crackers Phinn
2005-11-06, 04:41 PM
Wait so the things that taste really really good are bad for you? Fascinating.

teenie
2005-11-06, 04:56 PM
No wonder I havent been loosing weight....I eat everything on the list daily except the Doughnuts(I beat that devil a while ago)

a_ caribbean_dream
2005-11-06, 07:23 PM
I am so proud of myself, I have avoided all of these foods.

Except for tonight! lol I don't care- I can't take it anymore.
Donuts here I come!

mermaid
2005-11-06, 08:31 PM
It's common knowledge and common sense that these foods are bad for us, that is why they come in "lite" or "diet versions; HOWEVER- I ain't giving up one single thing on that list:D . I like them, they taste good, I don't ever go over board with them (although I did just finish off the bottom of the Baked Lays bag) and they will stay in my occassional diet.
Me and Homer feel the same way about these foods-
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v102/LaMermaid/homer-drool.gif

hotshot
2005-11-07, 09:35 AM
in high school and college i used to eat alot of that stuff, thinking doughnuts were "breakfast", chips "snack" and french fries "lunch or dinner" but once I stopped eating them i am so much healthier. i actually had both fries and a doughnut for the first time in a while this week and now dontcha know im sick. :(

Lisa23
2005-11-07, 11:07 PM
I can't give up my shrimp.

PhonyBaloney500
2005-11-08, 07:02 AM
Mmm donuts lol.

So even if it's part of a low calorie diet (saw you squeezed a 200 calorie donut into yoru 1500-1800 calorie diet) it's still bad? I guess cuz of the artery-attacking trans fats??

karezone
2005-11-08, 07:54 AM
I literally eat at least one doughnut everyday at breakfast right along with my hashbrowns.

SoniT
2005-11-10, 11:52 AM
Damn, all the foods I love are on this list. :(

mkstar826
2005-11-11, 05:17 PM
i think everything on that list is fine in moderation.

esoterica
2007-11-11, 06:00 PM
****bump****

MrsHouston
2007-11-11, 07:28 PM
I'm emailing this to my hubby