y0ssar1an22 wrote: » Surly levels of fat and sugar should be secondary to the amount of calories per 100g or whatever? Eat less calories than you burn = lose weight. Does it matter where the calories come from as long as you burn more than you eat?
Temptamperu wrote: » Low fat crisps and chocolate make me laugh. Even diet drinks are ridiculous. If your dieting and eating sweets and drinking sodas you are not dieting.
dee_mc wrote: » Special K contains 17% sugar, and more than 1.1g salt per 100g. There's a good study here (Which/NHS) giving a rundown of sugar, salt and fat levels in popular cereals: http://www.nhs.uk/news/2012/02February/Pages/breakfast-cereals-still-too-high-in-sugar.aspx I've always found Special K's 'low fat cereal' advertising strategy laughable, but so many people are sucked in by it! Shredded Wheat and Weetabix seem to be the purest cereals out there, although even Weetabix has relatively high salt levels.
dee_mc wrote: » I've always found Special K's 'low fat cereal' advertising strategy laughable, but so many people are sucked in by it!
bluewolf wrote: » "Low fat" always means "high sugar". If it says low fat, run away screaming Seriously, who thinks special k and cereal bars are good for ya
SV wrote: » but the ad said that if I eat them I'll be a newer slimmer me.....
Duggy747 wrote: » I only eat cereal grown in the African forests of China, handpicked by Indian farmers, with milk-free milk gluten-free soya, flower extract, sugar.
dee_mc wrote: » That depends: is the aim to lose weight/maintain a low weight, or to have a healthy body? Calorie counting can lead to weight loss, but if you want to be healthy you need to look at where exactly those calories are coming from.
topper75 wrote: » If it ran around, swam, or grew on a plant, then it is food. Everything else is processed junk. Clue - nobody is paid to pick Special K off a plant.
ScumLord wrote: » Nobody went and picked spaghetti bolognese or samwidges of a plant either. Just about every food eaten by humans goes through some form of processing. What do you think they make processed food out of? Animals and plants, they just stretch the ingredients by adding in cheaper bulking agents.
bluewolf wrote: » cereal bars are good for ya
humbert wrote: » Article summary: Fruit contains a lot of sugar.
y0ssar1an22 wrote: » I'm no expert but was always under the impression that it doesn't matter. eg: burn 2000 calories/day. Eat 1000 calories of fat or sugar. Net calorie loss = 1000. I suppose thats probably an over-simplification.
the_syco wrote: » Would they be better or worse than a Yorkie bar? I've replaced the Yorkies with the cereal bars.
--Kaiser-- wrote: » I don't much care for cereal (especially the 'healthy' sawdust type that people tend to eat) but I do like Coco Pops. So much so that if I buy a box of coco pops, whatever size, I will not stop until it's empty. I have a problem
homemadecider wrote: » Do adults eat boxed cereal for breakfast???
bluewolf wrote: » Hmmm yorkie 300 cals of which 32g sugar nutri grain 140 cals of which 12g sugar If it's literally 1 for 1 and you want to reduce calories, then it seems better yeah I love purple yorkies though