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Old 10-01-2009, 06:23 PM   #61
Bucknaked
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I don't see why they are so hell bent on removing it from our shelves. Surely a small amount on your toast isn't going to kill you. It's not like your eating the whole jar at once. We always have vegemite in the house, but 1 jar will last for many months. We don't cake it on the toast or sandwiches, its just a little on the knife to do 2 peices of toast. Theres other things in the supermarket which is far worst than a small dab of vegemite.

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Originally Posted by xbgs351
Butter
Cream
Eggs
How many products are made from these ingredients. I can see children crying when their birthday cakes end up as a mess in the bottom of the cake tin. Chefs everywhere will up in arms
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Old 10-01-2009, 09:34 PM   #62
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Are they for real? Have they read the label? Bugger all fats of any kind. Plenty of Niacin, Riboflavin, & Folate. They tell us to have plenty of those, but in your cereal. Vegemite has plenty of that, never mind the salt content it is bugger all compared to the vitamins above. Cattle get salt licks on farms, you need salt in hot weather,to help with persperation to replace some of what is lost when you sweat to help cool your body. Fats are the real enemy, my apologies about sounding off, but this can't be real surely?

Last edited by Boss 302; 10-01-2009 at 09:37 PM. Reason: Clarifaction
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Old 11-01-2009, 01:33 PM   #63
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Quote:
Originally Posted by vztrt
I can see ACA going to town on this.
Vegimite(sic) a foreign owned food thats putting our kids in extreem(sic) danger!!
Got to love sensationalist reporting.

Reality is that food never puts our kids in danger. Food doesn't talk to children.

It's stupid, irresponsible parents who make no effort in encouraging a healthy lifestyle.
Children need to eat a balanced diet and engage in activity.

It's about parents being responsible for their own children...not the government.

The government has more important things to deal with, like going overseas for pointless meetings, advocating green energy while driving large cars and living in McMansions, and encouraging honesty and integrity while they lie through their teeth to cover their incompetence and/or deals made to benefit themselves.
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Old 12-01-2009, 06:01 PM   #64
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Quote:
Originally Posted by EgoFG
Vegemite is a condiment.

Check the fat content of traditional salad dressing.
Check the salt content of 'chicken salt'.
Check the sugar content of the chocolate you sprinkle on your latte.

Condiments tend to be bad if you look at them in isolation - but hey - we do not (well most of us) eat vegemite by itself
Not to mention you can put as much sugar as you want in your cup of coffee or as much salt on your food as you want at home
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Old 12-01-2009, 06:57 PM   #65
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Whats annoying to me about this is that Vegemite has been good enough for us to eat for the last 30 years and i'm betting it had more salt, fat and sugar in back then.
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Old 13-01-2009, 05:45 PM   #66
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Seems Cornflakes might be a target as well.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/lifean...608617039.html

Quote:

Revealed: why some foods are addictive

Louise Hall
January 13, 2009

Cornflakes, biscuits and soft drinks may be as addictive as cigarettes and are in danger of advertising bans, strict regulations, high taxes and health warning labels, scientists say.

These and other heavily processed foods with a high glycaemic index (GI) trigger an addictive sugar rush that can be hard to resist and leads to obesity.

New Zealand scientists reviewed evidence showing compulsive food consumption has similar underlying brain mechanisms that result in drug dependence, and argue that heavily processed carbohydrates have the most potential to cause addiction.

Lead researcher Simon Thornley, from Auckland Regional Public Health Service, said foods with a high GI caused blood-sugar levels to spike suddenly, and this sugar rush stimulates the same areas of the brain associated with addiction to nicotine and other drugs. Low-GI foods produce gradual rises in blood sugar and insulin levels, and a feeling of contentment and satiety.He said the theory, if proven, had important public health implications.

Nicole Wigan from Maroubra said she makes sure her two children eat a balanced diet, but her son, Jack, 4, "could eat junk food all day long if I let him".

Having a school holiday treat of fish and chips at La Perouse beach yesterday, Ms Wigan said while she's heard of the glycaemic index, she doesn't do the weekly grocery shop based on high- or low-GI foods.

"I don't pay attention to it, but generally we eat quite a balanced diet and if they've eaten well, they can have a treat at night," she said.

This is the first time GI has been implicated as the predictor of the addictive potential of foods.

Dr Thornley said evidence showed people who binged on high-carb foods experienced symptoms of addiction - loss of control, a compulsion to keep taking higher amounts to get the same buzz - and suffered withdrawal if they went cold turkey.

And like those addicted to cocaine and alcohol, people with a higher body mass index had fewer brain pleasure receptors.

Carb addicts may benefit from getting their hit of blood sugar more slowly by eating low-GI foods or even using a food version of the nicotine patch. "Just as slow release forms of nicotine help smokers recover from addiction, low GI foods may reduce cravings in obese or overweight populations," Dr Thornley and his colleagues at the University of Auckland wrote in the journal Medical Hypotheses.

GI pioneer Jennie Brand-Miller, from the University of Sydney, welcomed the study but said the assertion high-GI foods have a shorter time to peak concentration in the bloodstream is incorrect. All foods take about 30 minutes to peak, but high-GI foods peak and fall at substantially greater levels, Professor Brand-Miller said. "It's a novel idea that draws on strong evidence that glucose consumption influences levels of the feel-good chemical serotonin in the brain."

An editorial in The American Journal of Psychiatry last year proposed some forms of obesity are driven by an excessive motivation for food and should be classified as a mental disorder, or "food addiction" in the upcoming Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

The director of the US National Institute on Drug Abuse, Nora Volkow, wrote that the symptoms of obesity - compulsive consumption of food and inability to restrain from eating - are remarkably parallel to those described for drug dependence.

The professor of population health at Deakin University, Boyd Swinburn, said while there were commonalities between drug-seeking behaviour and the extreme measures a starving person will go to for food, labelling obesity an addiction was "far-fetched".
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Old 13-01-2009, 06:04 PM   #67
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i think its time they stop trying to work out whats good and bad for the body ,changes every day ,eggs no eggs ,cereal no cereal wine no wine .does anybody here genuinely not know whats good and bad .they are starting to look pathetic with all their guessing ,keeps me amused anyway!!
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