BLOG 101 THE FRENCH FRY
Oh those delightful golden strips of salty goodness. French
fries are the favorite side order…. no doubt. Fries may not be the best choice
on our fitness journey and they qualify as a “sometimes” food. So hey, let’s
take a look at where these potato yummies came from.
The general theory is that either the French or Belgians
invented the French fry, hence the name. However, the potato was first
introduced to Europe from the Spanish. The idea of frying potatoes came from
Belgium where they liked to fry fish. So essentially, the Spanish brought the
potatoes, but the Belgians introduced how to prepare them. (www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2010/09the).
The popularity of the French fry is credited to a French
army medical office named, Antoine-Augstine Parmentier. During the Seven Years
War he was captured and given rations of potatoes. The French had only given
potatoes to pigs and farm animals because they were thought to carry diseases.
When he wasreleased he helped to convince Parliament that potatoes were in fact
“edible”. When he hosted dinner to high profile figures such as Benjamin
Franklin, Antione Lavoisier, King Louis XVI, and Queen Marie Antionette, he
served his French fry dish. (www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2010/09the).
McDonalds is the dominant potato buyer in the U.S. As such,
“The company purchases about 3.4 billion pounds of potatoes in American each
year” (https://www.reference.com/food/many-french-fries-mcdonals-s-sell-f97b661d08).
This then leads to: “McDonalds sells about nine million pounds of French fries
across the globe daily” ((https://www.reference.com/food/many-french-fries-mcdonals-s-sell-f97b661d08).
So isn’t a potato a vegetable, which means French fries are
good for us?? Wrong. Jonathan Bonnet, MD from Duke University says, “They
involve frying, salting, and removing one of the healthiest parts of the
potato: the skin, where many of the nutrients are found” (https://time.com/3896-83/french-fries-potato/).
And then let’s face the facts: “A medium order of fries has 365 calories along
with 17 grams of fat, a full 26% of your daily value. Sodium clocks in at 246
mg, or 10% of the upper limit you should eat in a day” (https://time.com/3896-83/french-fries-potato/).
Sorry to rain on that healthy parade.
We certainly can opt for better side choices on our fitness
journeys. A fry here and there won’t hurt us, but remember those drive thru
days led to some folk’s current conditions. A momentary taste bud satisfaction,
takes much longer to leave the gut then we want. I’m not telling you to eat
broccoli every night haha, but you get my drift. And now we are more informed
about those darn good tasting stripes of yummy saltiness.
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