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Why Food Became Engineered to Defeat You

Why Food Became Engineered to Defeat You

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The “Real Food” Protein BarThere may be no phrase in modern nutrition more ridiculous than this:“Real food protein bar.”And yet, somehow, we are expected to nod seriously when someone says it.Recently, internet nutrition personality Paul Saladino introduced what he described as his best “real food” protein bar. While I have nothing personal against the man. I admire the confidence required to sell twelve protein bars for forty-four dollars while talking about ancestral living.Because let’s be honest for a moment.Protein bars are the modern candy bar.They simply come wrapped in better branding, cleaner fonts, and enough wellness language to make people feel virtuous while eating what is essentially an expensive Snickers bar with a podcast sponsorship.Now, before the internet declares me anti-protein-bar, let me clarify something immediately.I actually like Aloha bars.They’re expensive, but they say the right words to me. More importantly, they taste better than most compressed drywall products pretending to be nutritious. At the same time, real life exists, and sometimes convenience matters because airports happen, traffic happens, and long clinic days happen.Still, pretending industrial engineering somehow untouches these foods is a bit like pretending woodland elves handcrafted a Tesla.Breakfast Used to Be a Moral LectureTo understand how we got here, we need cereal, because cereal tells the entire story of modern food in one aisle.The first cereals in America were essentially granolas—dense grain mixtures that required chewing, preparation, and a bit of commitment. While nobody was exactly dreaming about them at night, they solved an important problem because they stored well, traveled well, and provided calories in an expanding industrial society.Then along came John Harvey Kellogg.Now, Kellogg was brilliant, strange, deeply moralistic, and profoundly suspicious of pleasure. He believed rich foods, spicy foods, meat, and almost anything enjoyable stimulated dangerous passions, and among those passions, he was particularly terrified of masturbation, which he viewed as one of the great threats to civilization.So his answer was blandness.Very blandness.Little sugar. Little excitement. Little stimulation.The original breakfast cereal movement was not designed around pleasure.Instead, it was designed around suppression.In many ways, those cereals were crunchy moral discipline.Then the Cereal Aisle Became Las VegasFast forward a hundred years, and the cereal aisle becomes the exact opposite of Kellogg’s vision.Sugar increases dramatically.Crunch becomes engineered.Colors explode across the box.Mascots arrive to recruit children before they can read.Eventually, breakfast stops being a health intervention and slowly transforms into dessert with vitamins sprinkled on top.And importantly, none of this happened because someone woke up wanting to destroy public health.That’s the part people often misunderstand.Food Engineering Solved Real ProblemsBefore obesity became the dominant nutritional problem, the real challenge facing humanity was hunger.For most of history, people worried about:starvationfood spoilagecrop failurestransportationand simple calorie availabilityModern food engineering changed that reality.Shelf-stable foods mattered.Affordable calories mattered.Transportation mattered.Refrigeration mattered.And honestly, millions upon millions of lives have been improved because of those advances.It is very easy for people with stocked refrigerators and grocery delivery apps to romanticize the past, but the past involved a tremendous amount of malnutrition, uncertainty, and hunger.So modern food systems were not evil.They were revolutionary.The Problem ChangedHowever, in solving one problem, we slowly created another.Because once calories became:cheapportablestableand endlessly available…the challenge was no longer finding enough food.The challenge became stopping.And this is where modern biology collides with the modern grocery aisle.Our brains evolved in environments where calorie-dense food was rare and valuable. Suddenly, within just a few generations, we found ourselves surrounded by foods engineered to be affordable, repeatable, and highly rewarding.That mismatch matters.Extrusion Changed EverythingMost people have never heard the word extrusion, even though it may be one of the most important food technologies in modern life.The process is simple.Take starches, grains, or protein powders.Apply heat and pressure.Force them through machinery.Suddenly, you have:cerealcrackerscheese puffsprotein snacksbreakfast barsAnd here is the important part: extrusion changes texture, and texture changes satiety.When food crunches perfectly, dissolves quickly, and slides down effortlessly, people consume more of it before fullness has time to register.That is not a conspiracy.It is simply biology interacting with engineering.The Grocery Store Became Natural SelectionFood companies did not ...
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