November
11th
  5:47:11 AM

Eat fast, grow fat

Fast food, as we all know, tends to make you fat. But even slow food cooked lovingly at home and eaten at the table could do the same if you ate it too fast.

Researchers in Greece have found that bolting your food upsets metabolism and leaves you feeling less satisfied than if you ate more slowly.

In this study, people consumed the same test meal, 300ml of ice-cream, at different rates. Blood samples were taken to measure glucose, insulin, plasma lipids and gut hormones before the meal and at 30 minute intervals after the beginning of eating, until the end of the session, 210 minutes later. Those who took the full 30 minutes to finish their ice cream had higher concentrations of gut hormones PYY and GLP-1, and also tended to have a higher fullness rating.

“Our findings give some insight into an aspect of modern-day food overconsumption, namely the fact that many people, pressed by demanding working and living conditions, eat faster and in greater amounts than in the past,” said Dr Alexander Kokkinos. “The warning we were given as children that ‘wolfing down your food will make you fat,’ may in fact have a physiological explanation.”

It seems likely that fast food, fast eating and over-eating go naturally together -- a product of the “I want it now” mentality that family dining counteracts by specifying a time for the meal and slowing things down with conversation. Another argument for family meals.



 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to FamilyEdge
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Why Sensible, Well-balanced Parents are Superior
10 Feb 2012
Daycare must focus on child, not adult needs, says new report
9 Feb 2012
About gender
7 Feb 2012
More time online = less happiness among girls
6 Feb 2012
Changing the way teens think
3 Feb 2012

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
Feb 2012 | Jan 2012 | Dec 2011 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

How hedonism became America’s official religion
9 Feb 2012
An edict from the Obama administration has ended the American experiment in religious liberty.

Bombs across the border
10 Feb 2012
The US makes a strong case that its military interventions in Pakistan are just and legal. Whether they’re good is…

A parental defence of highly effective nagging
10 Feb 2012
When a deadly habit becomes a useful tool in the parental armoury.

Lost in Transition III: A collective challenge
9 Feb 2012
Who is to blame for the moral ignorance of young adults, and what is to be done?

Pink Lego
8 Feb 2012
Why are feminists throwing their toys out of the cot over a victory for girl power?


 Tags
obesity, work, United Nations, working mothers, New Zealand, contraception, mental health, friendship, suicide, family economics, marriage, morality, video games, religion, China, birth control, immigration, polygamy, one-child policy, Hollywood, dating, gender, cohabitation, teenagers, homosexuality, adoption, fertility, work-life balance, social networking, emerging adults, Africa, child obesity, prostitution, child development, abortion, schools, character education, recession, child wellbeing, commitment, family, women, unemployment, social media, youth, health, single motherhood, Australia, men, divorce, ageing, books, family breakdown, AIDS, childcare, brain, France, psychology, smacking, same-sex marriage, adolescence, gender equality, family structure, education of children, child abuse, research, children, poverty, violence, fathers, family policy, media ethics, baby boomers, internet, happiness, United States, South Africa, large families, pornography, trafficking, parental rights, education, family meals, family relationships, Obama, technology, fashion, family values, child safety, girls, parenting, television, young adult, self-control, child welfare, sex education, abstinence, media, Spain, feminism, demography, children's health, sexual behaviour, fatherhood, sexualisation of children, motherhood,