psunavy03 2 days ago

Why do we need these kinds of sensationalist names for things? Why is it so important that they be "ultra-processed" foods? Can't they just be "overprocessed" or perhaps use some other more neutral term?

It's like the 90s when everything had to be "EXTREME!!"

7
rsynnott 2 days ago

Well, it's only _over_-processed if we assume it is _bad_. A consensus does seem to be emerging that it _is_ bad, but building that right into the name seems unhelpful. And as alluded to in the article, what the point is after which something is 'over'-processed is not particularly clear.

2OEH8eoCRo0 2 days ago

Olive oil, steel cut oats, and dried beans, are processed. It's to differentiate from things like Coca-Cola or TV dinners.

cynicalpeace 2 days ago

It's funny that it's only the high IQ types that have difficulty distinguishing beans from coca cola.

2OEH8eoCRo0 2 days ago

It's what I like to call being so smart they're stupid. Everyone strives to be the smartest most pedantic one in the room around here.

ninalanyon 2 days ago

Ultra-processed foods are broadly speaking foods that cannot be produced in a normal domestic or restaurant kitchen.

willcipriano 2 days ago

> some other more neutral term

Nutrient dense/high calorie is probably more accurate.

snapcaster 2 days ago

This would encompass eggs and is leaving out what might be key components (engineered by food scientists and produced in factory)

snapcaster 2 days ago

I think it's partly due to the people (this site is full of them) that would read any other term and go "what is processing? Cooking and cutting is processing hurr durr"

cynicalpeace 2 days ago

I have had this exact argument on HN at least a half dozen times.

aidenn0 2 days ago

Someone will have to explain to me why so many people claim that honey is not a "refined sugar." If bees do the refining than it doesn't count?

snapcaster 2 days ago

yeah people still do it but at least adding the "ultra" indicates is not something a person cooking for their family would be doing to food

nightski 2 days ago

It's just as dumb though because the act of processing doesn't really mean anything.

2OEH8eoCRo0 2 days ago

If it didn't mean anything then why the findings in the article?

nightski 2 days ago

The findings in the article basically came down to - people eat more calories when it tastes good. Even the article itself admits there are a multitude of other factors that could account for the results other than UPF.

snapcaster 2 days ago

It absolutely does if you're able to take off the pedantry glasses for like 5 seconds. Why are you nitpicking this? is it because you actually think articles like this are about chopping carrots?

"if it couldn't be made outside of a factory, don't eat it."

from someone else in the comments is pretty clear

mewpmewp2 2 days ago

Why jump from one weird statement to another? Maybe even a worse one?

cynicalpeace 2 days ago

Here we go again...

mewpmewp2 2 days ago

It's still a misleading term, so it would be good to talk about what the actual harm is, as to not confuse people. And it does confuse, since I vividly remember as a kid being confused by it, and it's important to have healthy habits from a young age. It always sounded a bit weird that food being "processed" means it's bad, so I didn't understand it really. And if you don't focus on the harm, but use terms like this, it's hard to say what is pseudoscience and what is actual science.

tjpnz 2 days ago

Until you add ketchup.

TheBigSalad 2 days ago

Proce-X'ed foods

user_7832 2 days ago

Just as a side note/for info, there’s a specific definition (I think by the FAO?) used for them. The tldr is that when you’re extracting/reacting something to use as an ingredient (eg hydrogenated oil), it becomes ultra processed.