Scientists from University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust and the University of Warwick placed Matt Tebbutt of Channel 4’s Food Unwrapped in a metabolic chamber, which measured the calories ingested and burned while he ate celery in various forms over a period of 12 hours.
After being fed both celery raw and in a smoothie – each containing 53 calories — Tebbutt burned 72 calories while eating the raw celery and 112 while drinking the smoothie. In both cases, he burned more calories digesting the celery than the celery contained.
10 ounces of celery has 0.1 grams of total fat, with no saturated, trans, polyunsaturated, or monounsaturated fat.
10 ounces of chippy chips would be?
23g, but again moving the goal posts, my initial statement in reply to your editing my initial post that all food in sufficient quantities is a fat food still stands true.
10 ounces of celery has 0.1 grams of total fat, with no saturated, trans, polyunsaturated, or monounsaturated fat.
10 ounces of chippy chips would be?
23g, but again moving the goal posts, my initial statement in reply to your editing my initial post that all food in sufficient quantities is a fat food still stands true.
See my edit to clarify (sic) the fat content, and other post re net loss.
10 ounces of celery has 0.1 grams of total fat, with no saturated, trans, polyunsaturated, or monounsaturated fat.
10 ounces of chippy chips would be?
23g, but again moving the goal posts, my initial statement in reply to your editing my initial post that all food in sufficient quantities is a fat food still stands true.
And as Weeksy pointed out elsewhere, I can't edit your post.
Mr. Dazzle wrote: Sun Nov 03, 2024 5:53 pm
Meh, Kerridge is perfectly happy to stick his name on factory produced stuff for M&S now
Yes, but made in a Marks and Spencer factory.
It may well be, but the haddock with his name on it isn't as good as the ordinary M&S haddock that's cheaper. (Yes, I'm a snooty twat that buys food from M&S)