US Americans don’t care if food is ‘processed’ — if it’s cheap: poll

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Americans don’t care if food is ‘processed’ — if it’s cheap: poll​

The average American spends $67 on processed foods every week, according to a recent survey.

The poll asked 2,000 respondents about their experiences with buying both “natural” and “processed” goods at the grocery store and found that the average weekly grocery bill amounts to $98.50.

Of this, the average person believes that 32% of their diet is made of natural ingredients.

Conducted by OnePoll in partnership with NatureSweet, the survey also looked at what exactly Americans think “natural” and “processed” means.

When seeing the term “natural” on a food product, about half of those polled said they assume the product is made of all whole ingredients (51%) and that there won’t be any preservatives present (49%).

One in four (26%) also assume that “natural” food products are ultimately better for the environment.

Similarly, 65% believe that food products that claim to be “sustainable” were grown or produced in a way that benefits the environment.

By contrast, respondents said that when they don’t see the word “natural” on food packaging, they tend to think that the product must have chemicals in it (52%) or are likely to be processed (43%).

Forty-two percent said that they assume food that isn’t labeled “natural” is unhealthy, or even full of preservatives.

With all this in mind, it’s not surprising that 61% of respondents have actively sought out foods with fewer preservatives or processed ingredients within the last year.

They’ve also been reading the ingredient labels on food products more closely (60%), buying more “natural” foods (42%) and prioritizing locally-made or grown foods (24%).

“Opting for healthy snacks is easier now than ever before,” said Dr. Martin Ruebelt, chief scientific officer at NatureSweet. “Today’s markets offer fresh, ready-to-eat fruits and vegetables, neatly packaged for on-the-go convenience. These are delicious and nutritious alternatives to processed foods we often grab in a rush.”

Although the majority of Americans claim to care about how natural their food is (69%), where their food was grown (80%) and whether or not the people growing it were fairly paid (79%), the data also shows that other factors have a much greater impact.

More than half (55%) said that what matters most to them when buying food is the taste, almost twice as the number who cited where it’s grown (22%).

And another 66% of respondents said they don’t care where their food comes from as long as they can afford it.

When asked to choose between convenient processed food and harder-to-source natural food, one in four (25%) chose the former — but one in three (34%) said they’d choose the latter.

“Understanding the origin of your food is important to making informed purchasing and eating decisions,” emphasizes Dr. Ruebelt. “Reading the labels and learning about the company and its practices will reveal if their values align with yours. The tag ‘local’ alone doesn’t ensure food safety, employee welfare, or sustainable practices. It’s critical to delve deeper.”
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Selectively breeding it, cultivating it, drying it and combusting it with flame is not how God intended. Unless they're eating raw ditchweed, their gay hippie weed is just as natural and God-approved as my superior heterosexual meth.
It's a lot worse than that. The THC and derivative products are as far removed from Cannabis Sativa and Indica as Marlboro cigarettes are removed from Nicotiana Tabacum. And both have synthetic counterparts as well.
 
I feel like the term processed food is too broad and general. Processed food can cover anything from frozen or canned vegetables to goyslop paste created entirely in a lab or factory and made out of nothing but chemicals.
I agree. According to their definition, the pickles I canned are processed with preservatives (vinegar counts).
 
“Opting for healthy snacks is easier now than ever before,” said Dr. Martin Ruebelt, chief scientific officer at NatureSweet. “Today’s markets offer fresh, ready-to-eat fruits and vegetables, neatly packaged for on-the-go convenience. These are delicious and nutritious alternatives to processed foods we often grab in a rush.”

And they're always like 4-5x more expensive than just buying the damn produce yourselves and making it.

“Understanding the origin of your food is important to making informed purchasing and eating decisions,” emphasizes Dr. Ruebelt. “Reading the labels and learning about the company and its practices will reveal if their values align with yours. The tag ‘local’ alone doesn’t ensure food safety, employee welfare, or sustainable practices. It’s critical to delve deeper.”

Lmao, nah, I'm not paying more for "organic" or "natural" stuff that tastes no different than the generic brands and costs 4-5x as more.
 
i mean as long as you follow calories in, calories out, you can can basically eat whatever you want. people are just much less active than they used to be. A good portion of jobs nowaday is just deskwork. You walk maybe a few minute from and to your car. sit all day. Even chores are much less arduous. Laundry is done automatically, dishes as well. Food is often ordered or rdy made because a lot of avrg adult nowaday dont even fucking know how to cook and even if they do cook we have tons of machine to help us (when the last time you knead dough?).
Exactly, if you WFH your commute could be less than 20 steps a DAY.
 
I feel like the term processed food is too broad and general. Processed food can cover anything from frozen or canned vegetables to goyslop paste created entirely in a lab or factory and made out of nothing but chemicals.
That's why I eat leaves straight from the tree and dive into salmon streams with my mouth open, just like God intended.

I would say "use common sense" but that's so laughably optimistic with today's niggercattle you might as well tell a nigger to stop stealing and work hard.

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As Mrs Vesperus says, don't buy cheese from Dollar Tree.
 
That's why I eat leaves straight from the tree and dive into salmon streams with my mouth open, just like God intended.

I would say "use common sense" but that's so laughably optimistic with today's niggercattle you might as well tell a nigger to stop stealing and work hard.

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As Mrs Vesperus says, don't buy cheese from Dollar Tree.
It's kind of amusing to see fat fucks say "Ackchyually processed could mean anything from pickles to slim jims" as if it's not the most intellectually dishonest argument ever. Fatsos don't typically get fat on pickled cucumbers and veggie stir fries.

I understand the idea that it's too general of a term, but most people aren't thinking of pickles when they're thinking about processed food; they're thinking about hotdogs and store-bought pastries.
 
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That's why I eat leaves straight from the tree and dive into salmon streams with my mouth open, just like God intended.

I would say "use common sense" but that's so laughably optimistic with today's niggercattle you might as well tell a nigger to stop stealing and work hard.

View attachment 5274750

As Mrs Vesperus says, don't buy cheese from Dollar Tree.
I can't stand that sliced processed cheese shit. My grandma used to buy it when I was a kid. I'd eat it, but I didn't really like it that much. These days the taste of it makes me retch. That shit's the reason I won't eat like 90% of the fast food burgers out there.
 
My favorite processed foods are instant rice and mashed potatoes. I’m also not 600 pounds yet, so no need to worry if it’s unhealthy. I like what I like and telling me what to eat triggers my eating disorder.
 
I wish everyone would stop eating processed foods, and fast food/pickup shit, and start eating only fresh ingredients including farm-to-table meat.

Only so the economy would fucking collapse already.
 
Food topics always amuse me as it degrades into autistic, half researched min/maxing as if every human is a perfectly interchangeable system and every food item is perfectly fungible and can be reliably predicted. It becomes an autistic screeching fest of 'experts' who just look at lab numbers and know fuck and all about bio availability and digestive processes, verses a dozen different fad diets that all only really work well for a subset of people with particular genetics that help them process some precursors better than others into actually usable vitamins. And then off in the corner you've just got the vegans screeching while their organs fail, but they don't really qualify as human so its probably fine.

90% of people are better off just eating less, and eating more animal products as a fraction of that lesser whole. Stuffs nutritionally dense, hard to fuck up entirely with processing (even spam or Bologna is better than beyond meat). Everything else is a mix of personal preference and genetics - Some people are super sensitive to dietary fiber, or easily absorbed sugars, or particular fats. Some people can shotgun straight canola oil and MSG and see no ill effects. Folks are so fixated on proving things academically via studies that they've completely ignored the value of proving them observationally - I don't care what your study says about something, I'm staying healthy doing X thing and I'll keep doing it.
 
Folks are so fixated on proving things academically via studies that they've completely ignored the value of proving them observationally - I don't care what your study says about something, I'm staying healthy doing X thing and I'll keep doing it.
I'd also like to add that health studies are largely a statistical wash anyway. A study that tells you drinking coffee is like 3% better for you, with 2% margin of error doesn't really mean anything. I think this is a large contributor to health fads - every few years you get a small sample size study that contradicts the fad kicked off by the previous small sample size study.
The classic video where a guy made chicken nuggets from scratch for some kids:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=mKwL5G5HbGA
McDonald's actually updated their nuggy production because of this. You could show this video to your kids and they'd still happily eat McDonald's.
 
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I still remain unconvinced that "organic" or "non-GMO" food is anything but an upcharged placebo. Anything that comes from a farm or ranch is inherently unnatural.
Frankly, if you are at the grocery self checkout, selecting "organic" item codes instead of regular when buying produce, you deserve to be scammed of every cent.
 
I'd also like to add that health studies are largely a statistical wash anyway. A study that tells you drinking coffee is like 3% better for you, with 2% margin of error doesn't really mean anything. I think this is a large contributor to health fads - every few years you get a small sample size study that contradicts the fad kicked off by the previous small sample size study.
There's also the issue of who is funding the studies, like what happened with the sugar industry funding studies blaming fat for people being... fat. Just because fat has more calories than sugar per gram doesn't mean all of it is worse for you than sugar. A lot of the fat-free slop is loaded with sugar to compensate because the flavor carrier is now gone.
 
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