| Does This Supermarket Aisle Make Me Look Fat? | |
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by Leah Koenig, December 31, 2007
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(x-posted at The Jew & The Carrot)
Bonnie over at Ethicurean created a fascinating infographic for Wired that overlays the price per calorie of various foods with their energy payoff and sugar content. It depicts what Adam Drewnowski researched and Michael Pollan wrote about for the New York Times: 1. The cheapest available food is often the most fattening. 2. The most calorie-dense foods (usually processed and frozen convenience items) tend to be concentrated in the center shelves of supermarkets.
This supermarket setup seems pretty pervasive - it even holds true at my idealistic, non-profit Food Coop where I spent my monthly shift last night ringing up fancy cheese and (expensive) mixed-drink ephemera like limes and mint for people's New Year's celebrations. Check out Bonnie's graphic above and, when shopping in the "middle aisles" of your grocery store, don't forget Rambam's "middle way" - moderation.
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Leah Koenig is the Editor-in-Chief of The Jew and the Carrot: Hazon's Blog on Jews, Food, and Contemporary Life (www.jcarrot.org) She is also a freelance writer living in Brooklyn (as far as she knows, she's the More... |
zbird
The chart would be more
The chart would be more realistic and more stark if meat and fish were separated, because fish must have a higher price per calorie than poultry or red meat.
--Z
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