Nutrition 101
What are carbohydrates?
A couple of days ago I defined what a calorie was and that it did not display
nutritional value, calorie measurement marks the energy units in foods.
Once you break foods down they go into 3 categories Fat, Proteins and
Carbohydrates. Within each of these three groups there are a numbers of
subset groups in each. Today we will focus on one category and that is
Carbohydrates.
The simplest way
to understand carbohydrates is to break down what they do for us. Our
bodies break down carbohydrates in order to make glucose. Glucose is a
sugar that our body uses to give us energy. Carbohydrates generally
provide us with fiber, vitamins and minerals.
What Are the Different Kinds of Carbohydrates?
There are two kinds of carbohydrates: simple and complex. We get our
simple carbohydrates from foods such as milk, milk products, fruit or
table sugar. Complex carbohydrates, on the other hand, come from
starches like cereal, bread, beans, potatoes, and starchy vegetables.
As I stated before there are subset categories in each of the three
nutrient groups. Simple and complex is a basic subset yet we can further
break these groups down into the types of sugars these foods contain.
We can also measure them on a ratio scale like the Glycemic Index Ratio.
This scale measure the speed at which the carbohydrate is broken down
into fructose and glucose in the body. The higher the number the faster
the carb converts to sugar in the body. The lower the number the slower
the carb converts into usable energy. Too high of a number is typically
found in simple carbs and the lower numbered carbs are typically found
in the complex carbohydrates.
The trick to staying lean is to
keep your blood sugar normal all day long by eating complex carbs based
on your activity levels for the next 3 hours. By keeping blood sugar
levels in normal range your body can not store fat and makes it
difficult to burn muscle fiber.
That is why it is so important to understand what type of carbs you need throughout the day.
As I have already mentioned there are many subsets in carbohydrates so I
will briefly give you the description of these different catagories.
Carbohydrates may be classified into monosaccharides, disaccharides,
oligosaccharides, polysaccharides, and heterosaccharides. The most
fundamental type is the simple sugars called monosaccharides, such as
glucose, galactose, and fructose. These simple sugars can combine with
each other to form more complex type. The combination of two simple
sugars is called disaccharide whereas carbohydrates consisting of two to
ten simple sugars are called oligosaccharides, and those with a larger
number are called polysaccharides.
Carbohydrates are produced
in green plants by photosynthesis and serve as a major source of energy
in animal diets. They also serve as structural components, such as
cellulose in plants and chitin in some animals. Their derivatives play
an essential role in the working process of the immune system,
fertilization, pathogenesis, blood clotting and development.
Bottom line is understanding carbohydrates can be made very complex.
Each and everyone of us eat or have eaten carbohydrates on a daily
basis. However simple carbs have become the general populations worst
enemy. The introduction of fructose and in particular high fructose
corn syrup (HFCS) has become societies number one problem. You see our
bodies are not designed to eat high amounts of the sugars and the proof
is in the population. HFCS can be compared to crack rock cocaine in its
ability to cause addiction. It triggers L-Dopamine response in the
brain the exact same way as cocaine or a number of illegal and legal
prescription drugs do. HFCS triggers the pleasure center in the brain
and it shuts down the production of Leptin (a protein hormone that
controls hunger). The more HFCS you consume you more damage you do to
your body and its functions. The list of damage HFCS is far too long to
list here in this article, I will be discussing this in detail at our
seminar this Saturday May 18 at 7:00PM at the Studio at 118 Shenandoah
Dr.
Come and learn all about HFCS and how it is damaging your body.
Fact: Obesity is at an all time high, diabetes and cancer are also at
epidemic levels. 50% of all Americans are now overweight! Obesity rates
in some states are passing 30% of the population.
Fact: Look
back in history and you will see a distinct relationship between disease
and sugar consumption. The history goes back several hundred years.
However HFCS is the new kid on the block and disease and obesity have
exploded since it entered our food supplies.
In closing there
are good carbs and there are bad carbs, there are even good sugars but
that is another story. I will discuss that at our seminar as well. Learn
to read labels on the foods you eat. In fact avoid eating foods that
need labels if at all possible. Processed foods are the problem because
almost every processed food contains HFCS. Eat whole foods, fresh
veggies, grass fed beef, hormone free chicken and eggs. Avoid canned
foods and eat frozen veggies it its place.
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