The farmers
gained cheap calories at the cost of poor nutrition, (today just three high - carbohydrate plants — wheat, rice, and corn — provide the bulk of the calories consumed by the human species, yet each one is deficient in certain vitamins or amino acids essential to life.)
And in response, it compels you to eat immediately — especially foods that have quick,
cheap calories like sugar.
Ever since Earl Butz was charged with creating a highly efficient ag sector under Nixon and Ford the USDA has been about production
of cheap calories through industrial agriculture.
Halo Top has found itself at the center of a deep philosophical divide: the ice cream purists versus those hungry for
a cheap calorie thrill.
This legislation would require the USDA to adopt standards based on recommendations from the Institute of Medicine that would lower calorie requirements for school meals, meaning schools would no longer be so pressed to use sugar as
a cheap calorie boost.
All deeply impoverished people around the world eat high - carb diets, because carb - rich plants are the most readily available «fallback foods» in the natural environment and
the cheapest calories available on the market.
At low incomes people eat mainly carbs, because the agricultural staples like wheat, rice, corn, and sorghum provide
the cheapest calories.
Here's a hint: add hamburger meat to everything:
cheap calories!
No wonder people buy this instead of arugula and kale - they are
the cheapest calories on earth, no muss or fuss or cooking and taste good too.