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What food do you have in mind that is delicious but not ultra processed? I don’t think any whole food gets even close to competing with foods such as pizza, French fries and ice cream. I think the addictive component is one aspect of it, but I also personally believe the body has a internal mechanism that keeps track of its micronutrient and macronutrient deficiencies and induces cravings to obtain those nutrients, regulated by the memory of past foods in the microbiome, so that also can trigger overeating.


Well, cheese is quite delicious and is not highly processed. Many kinds of seeds are delicious after a simple roasting (peanuts, sunflower seeds, pine seeds, hazelnuts, pistachio etc). Walnuts are delicious even raw. Sweet fruit such as bananas, cherries, raspberries, blueberries, mangoes, etc. are delicious. Honey is also delicious even completely unprocessed. Edit: forgot to mention steak, another lightly processed food that is one of the most delicious things you can eat.

Not to mention, there are processed staples eaten all over the world for hundreds or thousands of years without leading to widespread obesity or addiction - bread and beer being some of the oldest such examples.


A steak and a piece of fish requires no other ingredients other than salt to be delicious.

Many veggies can be delicious with just some heat + salt; though adding a few spices certainly helps.

I'd much rather eat a perfectly cooked skirt steak with home made chimichuri and a side of veggies than a domino's pizza.


They might be delicious but they probably don’t hijack your serotonin and dopamine levels the way that junk food can.


Is home-baked pizza considered ultra-processed?


Depends who you ask. Literally, yes, it is extremely highly processed: separating wheat grains from the seed pod, then turning them into a fine powder, then combining with water, yeast, and oil (which is itself a processed food, mechanically processing some seeds) then fermenting it, adding salt, adding other processed ingredients on top (mechanically processed tomatoes, cheese obtained by fermenting milk, often cured meats etc), finally baking the whole thing.

This is one of the problems of this idea of processed foods - many things which don't actually seem to be a significant problem are in fact highly processed, we just don't tend to think of them like that.




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