We may well be familiar with the expression that you can’t compare apples with oranges, but can you compare bananas with bananas?
Certainly, apples are very different from oranges, making any comparison difficult. But bananas are – seemingly – very similar to one another, so can you compare them in terms of their health benefits, their vitamin and mineral composition and their nutritional value?
Can one banana be better for you than another? Is it actually possible to get an accurate measure of the goodness of an individual banana? Should we be shopping around for the best bananas?
I use bananas as an example because I eat a lot of them, but the enquiry could apply to any fruit or vegetable.
The problem is that because bananas are a natural product, there are so many variables that go into their constitution. It makes it difficult to quantify exactly how healthy they are for us. When a nutritional guide informs us that a medium banana contains 0.4 grams of potassium or gives us a specific percentage of our recommended daily intake of a particular substance, how sure of this can we be?
Not all bananas may be equally healthy.
This does not mean that bananas are unhealthy. That is unlikely to be the case. Even under the direst conditions, there will still be health benefits. They may just not be as healthy as we think.
Despite being neither a scientist nor a nutritionist, I recognise some of the variables that can affect the production, distribution, and consumption of a banana. It means that there can be no certainty in determining a banana’s nutritional value.
So many questions; so many variabilities:
Oh yes, when it comes to healthy eating, there are many questions we need to consider. Some of these variations may have a marginal effect, but others may be much more significant; some aspects of our food intake we can control, and others we cannot.
As consumers, we should know what we are putting into our bodies; we should know the quality and nutritional content of what we eat. And yet it is so difficult to measure these values accurately.
Rather ironically, the foods that we can be most certain about in terms of their nutritional content are those highly tested foods that have been processed and packaged with clear cooking instructions – ready meals – more often than not, the unhealthy stuff.
With natural products, there can be so many unknowns, meaning we have to accept generalisations, estimates, and imprecision.
For consumers, the ongoing danger is that producers and distributors can be too driven by the desire for cost savings, efficiency gains and profit generation that some of the quality and benefits of their product can be undermined.
Suppliers should recognise that they are not just providing bananas. They are providing packages of goodness. We don’t eat bananas just because we like them; we also eat them for the goodness and health benefits that they give us.
All aspects of the natural food production industry should focus on improving and maximising the quality and nutritional content of its output. That means, from producer to consumer, reducing and eliminating factors that can degrade the product.
Food waste is not just about what we throw away; it is also about not getting the most out of the food we do eat.
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For more thoughts, go to the Oxthink Home page or check out the different sections on Health and Well-being, Lifestyle Choices, Parenting Advice, Understanding Society and General pages.
Alternatively, for articles on genetics and evolution, visit this author’s dedicated site at Genetically Wrapped.
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