The two biggest players in the "vitamin water" game are the original Vitamin
Water, owned by Coke, and Sobe Life Water, owned by Pepsi, which should start to
raise the red flags right there.
There are a bunch of other drinks playing the same game, with their light to
clear colors and healthy sounding names that make it sound like they are plain
old water with some nutrients added. Which is true, if you consider eight
teaspoons of sugar a nutrient.
Al Pacino takes his daily vitamin
supplement.
Vitamin
Water and
Life Water both contain 32.5 grams of sugar per bottle, so you
might as well hydrate after a workout by drinking a bottle of water and tossing
a full sized Snickers (30 grams of sugar) down your throat. But hey, at least
that's half a Snickers less than a can of Coke, so really it
might as
well be water.
There are low calorie versions out there, like Vitamin Water 10, but it still
has to appeal to their customer base: people who refuse to drink anything that
isn't sweet, even their daily vitamins.
"Man, if only these came in doughnut
form."
That means you're trading sugar for artificial sweeteners, and experts say
that's a bad idea from multiple angles. Those sweeteners have some possible
long-term side effects and might even
trick your body into slowing down its metabolism, causing you to
actually gain more weight than if you were on the regular stuff. But maybe your
particular brand uses stevia, the trendy natural sugar substitute. Well, you
should know it might even be
more controversial than artificial sweeteners and has been
banned in the
EU.
Basically, you name a sugar substitute, and we'll name you an organ failure
or type of cancer.
Which, coincidentally, is a fun party game at Weight
Watchers meetings.
Bran tastes terrible, and therefore must be good for you. One of the easier
ways to stuff that sawdust-like substance down your reluctant gullet is with a
bran muffin. Unfortunately, like Mary Poppins's medicine, any type of muffin you
use is sending the good stuff down with a spoonful of sugar and enough fat to
choke a Japanese Whaler.
The main ingredient in muffins is cake, and the main ingredient in cake is
fat. If you noticed that muffin wrappers tend to be grease soaked to the point
of translucence, you might have put this together already. But you might not
know that a medium-sized blueberry muffin
has more calories than a
McDonald's Sausage McMuffin that's the same size. Almost half of
those calories are from fat. Specifically, a third of the fat you are supposed
to eat in an entire day.
Damn you, you delicious, puffy pastry ... aw, we
can't stay mad at you.
Switching to bran doesn't stop the muffin from being worth its weight in
sausage, egg and heart attacks. Assuming bran muffins are any better for you is
like switching out the chocolate chips in chocolate chip cookies for raisins and
declaring it health food. Structurally, it's still mostly cookie. Switching to a
bran muffin gets you down to a just under the calorie count of a
Sausage McMuffin, which is not the kind of breakfast that will get
your body on the cover of
Shapely Ass magazine.
Or even the soon-to-be-launched ASS!
Magazine.
Trendy places like Starbucks are already on top of this with
low fat muffins. As you can see, they brought the fat calories down
to a much smaller percentage of the whole, but the overall calorie count is
still very much in the McMuffin range. Also, taking the fat out of a muffin
steals its soul. It's like a damned
scone or some shit.
#6.
Granola and Cereal Bars
Granola bars have to be good for you, right? Well, if they taste awful, then
yes. If they taste good, it's probably the same ingredients that make candy bars
taste good: sugar, fat and chocolate.
Sure, these bars all look really similar, with white or green boxes sporting
pictures of lumpy beige bars and smiling women in yoga clothes, but they run the
gamut from healthy sawdust bricks to Snickers bars in eco-themed wrappers.
"If this wasn't healthy, would I be eating it during
yoga?"
The Quaker Oats True Delights Bar contains raspberries and chocolate and
allegedly tastes pretty good, and it had better, because pound for pound, it's
pretty much got the same amount of fat and calories as a Snickers
bar. It's also this big.
Are your mouths watering, readers?
If you've got gigantic hands and therefore think that looks pretty big,
basically it's only half the size of a Snickers (1.2 ounces versus 2.0 ounces)
so there's a good chance you'll wind up eating two--or eating something else
when you get hungry again. Either way you might as well have eaten the candy
bar, for all the good it's doing you.
Plus, Mr. T endorses Snickers. So, there's
that.
Sure, there are granola bars out there that are actually good for you and not
made of candy, but
they taste like freaking granola. If you want to be
healthy, you gotta pay the price. Your body won't like doing without fat because
through most of the history of our species, fat meant quick energy we could use
to run away from a woolly mammoth. You can't trick your body into not wanting
it--you just have to suffer through.
#5.
Chewable Vitamin Tablets
Vitamin C has been touted as a cure-all for everything from preventing colds
to
curing cancer. The latter claim was popularized by Linus Pauling
and eaten up by people who forgot that he got a Nobel Prize in chemistry and not
medicine. The movement was dealt a bit of a setback when he died of cancer in
1994.
Anyway, Vitamin C may not cure cancer or AIDS (that's been claimed too) but
it is good for you. And for people who hate oranges or pills, the only solution
is chewable Vitamin C tablets.
Or maybe people just really want to devour Barney
Rubble.
However, with some chewable tablets, while you are eating the tablets, the
tablets are also eating you. The scientific name for Vitamin C is ascorbic acid,
which gives you a hint as to the problem.
Studies have shown that in some cases, chewable Vitamin C tablets
can cause people's teeth to erode.
Dentists
suggest you brush your teeth afterwards (although dentists suggest
you brush your teeth after everything) and try to buy a brand that has Vitamin C
in its non-acidic form. Or man up and swallow the pill.
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