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  • This is what's really in a McDonald's hamburger

    This is what's really in a McDonald's hamburger

    Got Holistic Health
    Thu, 22 May 2014


    What's REALLY In A McDonald's Hamburger Have you ever wondered what you are really eating when you sit down to a McDonald's hamburger?

    The following video illustrates that you are getting more than what McDonald's advertises when you eat one of their hamburgers.

    Aside from the enormous amounts of grease contained in a McDonald's hamburger, the advertised ingredients are no better for you.

    Why You Should NOT EAT McDonalds - YouTube

    According to McDonald's own website, this is the list of ingredients for their popular McDouble, the sandwich that you see in the above video.

    Ingredients for a McDonald’s Hamburger:

    100% Beef Patty:


    Ingredients: 100% pure USDA inspected beef; no fillers, no extenders. Prepared with grill seasoning (salt, black pepper).



    Thankfully, McDonald’s and several other chains recently stopped using the “pink slime” in their beef. But the vast majority of fast food beef comes from CAFO (concentrated agricultural feeding operation) cows. Not only is this horrible for the animals and the environment, but eating meat from sick animals will only make you sick. Eat a McDonald’s hamburger and you might be getting a mouth full of antibiotics, hormones, and dangerous bacteria.




    Regular Bun:


    Ingredients: Enriched flour (bleached wheat flour, malted barley flour, niacin, reduced iron, thiamin mononitrate, riboflavin, folic acid), water, high fructose corn syrup and/or sugar, yeast, soybean oil and/or canola oil, contains 2% or less of the following: salt, wheat gluten, calcium sulfate, calcium carbonate, ammonium sulfate, ammonium chloride, dough conditioners (may contain one or more of the following: sodium stearoyl lactylate, datem, ascorbic acid, azodicarbonamide, mono- and diglycerides, ethoxylated monoglycerides, monocalcium phosphate, enzymes, guar gum, calcium peroxide), sorbic acid, calcium propionate and/or sodium propionate (preservatives), soy lecithin.



    Oh boy. Where do I start? How about we just look at the length of this ingredient list. All of this for a bun? Did you know you can make your own bread using just flour, salt, and water? Seriously. The extra 20 – 30 ingredients here is stuff your body doesn’t need.



    Lets look at just a few of the above ingredients:



    Ammonium chloride… sounds tasty right? Did you know it is also an ingredient in fireworks, safety matches and contact explosives? Eat up.
    Ammonium sulfate is used most commonly as an artificial fertilizer for alkaline soils. It’s also in flame retardant materials. Ammonium sulfate activates yeast, so it helps to get industrially produced bread to rise.

    The soybean and/or canola oil used here are most likely GMO. They are also foods I generally avoid for a number of reasons.

    The high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), despite the desperate marketing strategies to persuade otherwise, is not natural. And because it’s in so much of our processed foods, not only is it hard to avoid, but it can be doing major damage to your health.

    “Enriched” flour sounds harmless enough. But “enriched” just means that all the nutrition was taken out in the first place. Refined flours are also hard for your body to digest, even before the mess of chemicals are added to it.


    I can’t even get through this whole list. But I think you get the point. Nothing really healthy or real here.


    Ketchup:

    Ingredients: Tomato concentrate from red ripe tomatoes, distilled vinegar, high fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, water, salt, natural flavors (vegetable source)

    As if HFCS isn’t enough… let’s add some regular corn syrup to the mix! Not to mention that most corn is GMO. Did you know that recently the first long term study on the effects of GMO was released? You can find it here. The part that should freak you out: Massive tumors in rats who are fed GMO corn for two years. What do I mean by massive? Check this out:



    That’s after two years. GMOs have been in our market for 20.



    Let’s talk about the “natural flavors.” What does that really mean? For me it means “don’t eat.” The term “natural flavors” can be used for a number of not-so-natural and definitely not-so-healthy ingredients including things like MSG, Aspartame and bugs (yes, bugs).


    Mustard:


    Ingredients: Distilled vinegar, water, mustard seed, salt, turmeric, paprika, spice extractive.

    Okay, these look familiar. Except maybe “spice extractive.” What does that mean? Could be a number of things… a little “iffy” for sure.


    Pasteurized Process American Cheese:


    Ingredients: Milk, water, milkfat, cheese culture, sodium citrate, salt, citric acid, sorbic acid (preservative), sodium phosphate, color added, lactic acid, acetic acid, enzymes, soy lecithin (added for slice separation)



    Let’s just start with the name. I mean, come on. Cheese is milk’s chance for immortality and “pasteurized process American cheese” just sounds nasty.



    Why are we messing with something so good? Pasteurization kills living enzymes. Although in this case it’s probably good since it can also kill the bad stuff that comes from milk from sick cows in horrific factories.



    With all the added colors, preservatives, and other “goodies” I think I’ll skip the cheeseburger.



    Pickle Slices:


    Ingredients: Cucumbers, water, distilled vinegar, salt, calcium chloride, alum, potassium sorbate (preservative), natural flavors (plant source), polysorbate 80, extractives of turmeric (color)



    Another handful of chemicals. Let’s just highlight the polysorbate 80 for a moment. In general this chemical is considered safe and well tolerated. Although a small number of people may be sensitive to it, and it may be harmful to people with Crohn’s disease. (But don’t worry, that only affects between 400,000 and 600,000 people in North America. Ouch.)


    Onions:


    Ingredients: Chopped onions.


    Finally. An ingredient list I can get behind. Of course, I prefer my veggies organic (locally grown is even better) to avoid pesticides. But so far the onions are your safest bet.

    So… what’s the verdict about the ingredients of a McDonald’s hamburger?

    Well for an ingredient list with 50+ questionable items… I think I’ll pass on the McDonad’s hamburger. Forever. And before you think I have something against McDonald’s, realize that this list will look very similar for any fast food hamburger.



    Remember, food is what helps your body thrive. Feed your body sick food and guess how you’ll end up? Sick.



    Ultimately, however, it’s not McDonald’s we should be mad at. Nobody is forcing us to eat this garbage. What we need is to help educate people and let them know what they are putting in their bodies. I think Joel Salatin says it well:




    Help empower people with information to make better choices. Share what you know. Being willing to change. Your body will thank you.

  • #2
    Not a McDonald's fan by any means, but I'm sorry - half the stuff in that article is total bunk and fearmongering. Whoo... long chemical names.. must be bad.

    Comment


    • #3
      Originally posted by Scrumhalf View Post
      Not a McDonald's fan by any means, but I'm sorry - half the stuff in that article is total bunk and fearmongering. Whoo... long chemical names.. must be bad.

      Which parts? Please elaborate.

      Comment


      • #4
        Where do I start? OK, here we go:

        1. Enriched flour in bun. Nothing wrong with most of the ingredients. YOu can't compare an industrial food preparation operation to your home bread maker. Yes, you can make bread with just flour, salt and yeast, but if you want a larger industrial bakery, you are going to have leavening agents, preservatives etc. to ensrue that the bread is done right and fresh after delivery. I didn't see anything on the list that is unreasonable. The position that a long list of ingredients is somehow bad is just an ideological position.

        And the common tactic of implying that long chemical names are bad is just rubbish ffear mongering, intended to fool uneducated people. Really? Ammonium chloride is a very commonly used yeast agent in breadmaking. So Ammonium chloride is bad but sodium chloride is good? Why? Because ammonium is longer than sodium? :retard: I suppose deoxy ribose nucleic acid should be really bad then!!

        And yes, some people with Chrohn's disease are sensitive to some of the items in the food. Well, they are sensitive to many many things. That does not in itself make the chemical bad.

        Pasteurized process American cheese sounds bad? What does that even mean? If I gae it a fancy french name, would it be ok then? Look, I like my cheese and don't particularly care for american processed cheese, but that in itself does not make it unhealthy or bad. Once again, the writer's snobbishness is showing.

        There is not shread of evidence that GMO foods are bad for you. Again, this is a purely ideoological position. Demonizing McDonalds because they use GMO items is just ridiculous.

        Same for organic. People who think organic food is grown without fertilizers or insecticides is grossly mistaken. They just use different kinds of fertilizers and insecticides, supposedly not artificial, but so what? Are natural things automatically better for you? That is a naturalistic fallacy. Trust me, there's nothing more natural than rattlesnake venom, and it most assuredly isn't good for you. Buy organic if you must, but don't think for a minute that it is necessarily better for you in any way. In fact, just washing your produce is going to make it just fine for consumption. And contrary to many people's erroneous beliefs, organic produce is not more nutritious than conventional produce.

        So again, if you don't like McDonalds, fine. If you think it is insipid fatty food, fine. Those are all legitimate reasons to not eat there. But the arguments listed here are just political and ideological positions and it is intellectually dishonest to pass them off as health reasons.

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by Scrumhalf View Post
          Where do I start? OK, here we go:

          1. Enriched flour in bun. Nothing wrong with most of the ingredients. YOu can't compare an industrial food preparation operation to your home bread maker. Yes, you can make bread with just flour, salt and yeast, but if you want a larger industrial bakery, you are going to have leavening agents, preservatives etc. to ensrue that the bread is done right and fresh after delivery. I didn't see anything on the list that is unreasonable. The position that a long list of ingredients is somehow bad is just an ideological position.

          And the common tactic of implying that long chemical names are bad is just rubbish ffear mongering, intended to fool uneducated people. Really? Ammonium chloride is a very commonly used yeast agent in breadmaking. So Ammonium chloride is bad but sodium chloride is good? Why? Because ammonium is longer than sodium? :retard: I suppose deoxy ribose nucleic acid should be really bad then!!

          And yes, some people with Chrohn's disease are sensitive to some of the items in the food. Well, they are sensitive to many many things. That does not in itself make the chemical bad.

          Pasteurized process American cheese sounds bad? What does that even mean? If I gae it a fancy french name, would it be ok then? Look, I like my cheese and don't particularly care for american processed cheese, but that in itself does not make it unhealthy or bad. Once again, the writer's snobbishness is showing.

          There is not shread of evidence that GMO foods are bad for you. Again, this is a purely ideoological position. Demonizing McDonalds because they use GMO items is just ridiculous.

          Same for organic. People who think organic food is grown without fertilizers or insecticides is grossly mistaken. They just use different kinds of fertilizers and insecticides, supposedly not artificial, but so what? Are natural things automatically better for you? That is a naturalistic fallacy. Trust me, there's nothing more natural than rattlesnake venom, and it most assuredly isn't good for you. Buy organic if you must, but don't think for a minute that it is necessarily better for you in any way. In fact, just washing your produce is going to make it just fine for consumption. And contrary to many people's erroneous beliefs, organic produce is not more nutritious than conventional produce.

          So again, if you don't like McDonalds, fine. If you think it is insipid fatty food, fine. Those are all legitimate reasons to not eat there. But the arguments listed here are just political and ideological positions and it is intellectually dishonest to pass them off as health reasons.

          Thank you very much for the intelligent reply.

          While I dont necessarily agree with you that there is no evidence that GMO's have no adverse health effects,or that non-processed food is not healthier than processed,I do believe that there are those that take things to the extreme in what they are worrying about.As with anything,moderation is the key to it all.As long as you don't overdo anything,you'll be ok.

          Now I do completely agree about not wanting to eat at Mcdonalds just because its just plain junk food.No matter what they use to make it,its not synonymous with the healthy lifestyle choices ive made including my diet.



          Thanks again for the insightful and thought provoking reply.

          Comment


          • #6
            You heard the one about dead children being put in?

            And no im not saying this lol

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Mr incredible View Post
              You heard the one about dead children being put in?

              And no im not saying this lol
              Only the deluxe cheeseburgers.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Mr incredible View Post
                You heard the one about dead children being put in?

                And no im not saying this lol
                No. But then again I never saw alive cow in my burger either.

                P.S. And always have dead chicken sandwiches. It's kind of hard to eat those sandwiches when the chickens are alive. :rofl:

                Comment

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