This what I was asked the other day.
My response was that I ensure I consume a minimum amount of fructose a day.
‘What…you don’t eat fruit? But fruit is good for you!’ was the immediate response..and a look of horror.
This got me thinking…
When I was child we had an apple a day (to keep the doctor away), we never ate bananas, had satsumas at Christmas time, grapes only when we were poorly and all other fruits were eaten seasonally – to go fruit picking was a family day out. And, as for dried fruit – in a wedding, Christening or Christmas cake or given as a present in the form of crystallized fruits at Christmas.
When did we start to eat so much fruit?
It is wonderful to be able to nip to a supermarket and see a plethora of fruit types from the usual to the exotic. But does this mean we should increase our intake?
I decided to cut back on sugar when I was informed of the different ways in which glucose and fructose are metabolised and the effects on the body. My understanding is ( I am not a doctor so I do not claim to be correct) every cell in the body can use glucose but the liver is the only organ that can metabolize fructose in significant amounts. When we eat a diet high in fructose the liver gets overloaded and starts turning fructose in to fat.
When I decided to ‘quit’ sugar for several weeks to let my body recalibrate the only sweet foods I ate regularly were medjool dates, dried apricots and a daily square of 85% plain chocolate. At the end of the first week I would have fought someone for a sugar fix! I was astounded. Seemingly even the small amount I ate was causing an ‘addiction’.
Again, I was informed that sugar, in the same way as cocaine, lights up the ‘pleasure centre’ in the brain which floods the body with dopamine – the feel good hormone. As this wears off another fix is needed. When we eat foods containing sugar often and in large amounts, the dopamine receptors start to down regulate so the next time we eat these foods, their effect is lessened so we need more to get the same level of ‘fix’. ie the sugar hijacks the brain chemistry to make us crave more and eat more.
Of course I intake sugars daily from milk in the form of lactose and from the vegetables I eat – but actively avoid other sources. When I occasionally eat some berries I really enjoy them but I ensure that I don’t eat them everyday. Do I feel better for this? Absolutely.
Love the more narrative tone of this post. Recipes are useful and inspiring me to cook more but humans love stories 😃
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Thank you – that is my style…I like to chat!!
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