Actually, All Food Is Full Of Chemicals

Actually, All Food Is Full Of Chemicals
|

You know that handful of wild, organic $10 blueberries you just ate? They were full of chemicals -- and that's okay!

As a new AsapScience video explains, all foods have chemicals in them. So when companies are calling their foods "chemical-free," it's pretty meaningless. So too is that ubiquotous maxim of health nuts everywhere: "If you can't pronounce it, don't eat it."

Chances are, you can't pronounce everything in a banana: glucose, fructose, sucrose, maltose, starch, glutamic acid, aspartic acid, histidine, leucine, lysine, arginine, valine, alanine, serine and glycine, to name a handful. And, paradoxically, the chemical list is sometimes shorter in unhealthy foods. A candy heart, for example, has a shorter list of chemicals than a banana does, according to the video.

While this might seem like semantics, it's an important concept to take into consideration with so many food companies using "natural" language to convince you their products are healthful.

As this video reminds us, sometimes you need a little food perspective. And it's worth taking blanket health claims with a grain of salt (or, y'know, NaCl).

"The idea of saying, 'Just avoid processed foods' is crazy," registered dietician Dawn Jackson Blatner told The Huffington Post. "Yogurt is a processed food. It’s actually been cultured and packaged. Canned beans, with no other ingredient besides beans, is processed because [the beans] have been cooked and they have been canned."

Of course, there is a difference between "good" and "bad" processed foods. Yogurt, for example, is minimally processed, meaning it retains the good qualities of its source, such as calcium and protein. Foods like soda and and refined bread fall, by contrast, fall in the "highly processed" category, meaning they're been processed to the point where they're not longer recognizable as their original plant or animal source.

Which all goes to show you that there's no shortcut to consumer knowledge. Yep. There are tons of chemicals in your banana, and your can of beans is processed. You learn something new every day!

15 Food Instagram Accounts You Should Be Following
Ashley Rodriguez(01 of15)
Open Image Modal
Food blogger Ashley Rodriguez of Not Without Salt shares photos will make you hungry all the time.

@ashrod
(credit:ashrod)
Spoon Fork Bacon(02 of15)
Open Image Modal
Not only should you follow this Instagram account, but you should follow the food blog too: Spoon Fork Bacon.

@spoonforkbacon
(credit:spoonforkbacon)
Dominique Ansel(03 of15)
Open Image Modal
We might be tired of hearing about his Cronut, but we never tire of the beautiful images of his pastries (and savories) that show up on our Instagram feed.

@dominiqueansel
(credit:dominiqueansel)
Craig Deihl(04 of15)
Open Image Modal
Not only is Craig Deihl the executive chef at Cypress but he also cures all his own meats (and shares it on instagram). Need we say more?

@cdeihl
(credit:cdeihl)
Blue Bottle(05 of15)
Open Image Modal
Satisfy all of your coffee porn needs with Blue Bottle's feed.

@bluebottle
(credit:Bluebottle)
April Bloomfield(06 of15)
Open Image Modal
April Bloomfield, chef of Spotted Pig and The Breslin, will not only wow you with her photographs but you'll also get recipe ideas and restaurant tips out of it too.

@aprilbloomfield
(credit:April Bloomfield)
Diane Cu(07 of15)
Open Image Modal
Diane Cu of White On Rice Couple food blog makes pictures so pretty you'll think you were dreaming. Oh, and they'll make you hungry too.

@dianecu
(credit:Diane Cu)
Tartine Bakery(08 of15)
Open Image Modal
Not only does Tartine Bakery make the best croissants in the U.S. (according to our humble opinion) but they Instagram them too.

@tartinebakery
(credit:Tartine Bakery)
Julie's Kitchen(09 of15)
Open Image Modal
Julie's food collages will make your day better.

@julieskitchen
(credit:Julie's Kitchen)
Marcus Nilsson(10 of15)
Open Image Modal
Marcus Nilsson, professional food photographer, gives you a behind-the-scenes peek at professional photo shoots (and then some).

@pissinginthepunchbowl
(credit:Marcus Nilsson)
Food52(11 of15)
Open Image Modal
Our friends at Food52 regram some of the most beautiful foods.

@food52
(credit:Food52)
Nicole Franzen(12 of15)
Open Image Modal
Professional food photographers never let us down, and Nicole Franzen is proof of that.

@nicole_franzen
(credit:Nicole Franzen)
Jamie Oliver(13 of15)
Open Image Modal
You'd be a fool not to follow our favorite chef Jamie Oliver.

@jamieoliver
(credit:Jamie Oliver)
Alice Gao(14 of15)
Open Image Modal
Alice Gao, professional photographer, shares whimsical images we wish we could get lost in.

@alice_gao
(credit:Alice Gao)
HuffPost Taste(15 of15)
Open Image Modal
DUH.

@huffposttaste
(credit:huffposttaste)