Most foods seem to have pros and cons. Bananas are great sources of potassium, but also super packed with sugar. Apples are decent sources of fibre (for a fruit), but again lots of sugar. Tomatoes, however, are per calorie an even richer source of potassium than bananas, yet are also low in sugar and high in many other nutrients. I was just curious if there's something I'm missing about eating many of these tasty fruits every day. I've been eating upward 750 to 1000 g or so of this stuff daily. I've read through lots of threads on here, and it seems people take tomato paste for the rich source of lycopene and other nutrients, but it's hard to find much opinion on a high daily intake of raw tomatoes. Is there any obvious (or non-obvious, I guess) reason I should be more careful about moderation of these seemingly incredible fruits? (I generally try to be careful about taking too much of any one consumable due to the usual "great source of X, but also full of Y, so eat in moderation!")
#1
Posted 22 April 2012 - 09:17 PM
Most foods seem to have pros and cons. Bananas are great sources of potassium, but also super packed with sugar. Apples are decent sources of fibre (for a fruit), but again lots of sugar. Tomatoes, however, are per calorie an even richer source of potassium than bananas, yet are also low in sugar and high in many other nutrients. I was just curious if there's something I'm missing about eating many of these tasty fruits every day. I've been eating upward 750 to 1000 g or so of this stuff daily. I've read through lots of threads on here, and it seems people take tomato paste for the rich source of lycopene and other nutrients, but it's hard to find much opinion on a high daily intake of raw tomatoes. Is there any obvious (or non-obvious, I guess) reason I should be more careful about moderation of these seemingly incredible fruits? (I generally try to be careful about taking too much of any one consumable due to the usual "great source of X, but also full of Y, so eat in moderation!")
#2
Posted 24 April 2012 - 02:21 AM
Edited by TheFountain, 24 April 2012 - 02:22 AM.
#3
Posted 24 April 2012 - 11:34 AM
Considering I eat up to six to seven times the number of tomatoes per day you do, I feel that I have some reasonable motivation to ask if I'm missing an important detail regarding overdoing it.
#4
Posted 25 April 2012 - 07:43 AM
Edited by TheFountain, 25 April 2012 - 07:44 AM.
#5
Posted 26 April 2012 - 08:08 AM
Anyway, as long as there's no obvious danger with such a high intake of tomatoes, I can rest assured that I'm not unknowingly screwing myself over. I remembered seeing no such warnings about, say, lycopene overdoses, and everything else seems reasonable (at least as far as I can tell using CRON-O-Meter, my tool of choice for dietary engineering). Thank you.
#6
Posted 06 November 2012 - 12:08 PM
Eating too much potatoes can be harmful for the liver health and can lead to hepatitis.
#7
Posted 09 November 2012 - 04:01 AM
The glycemic index of sweet potatoes made me wary (albeit it's better than other potatoes for sure) of including them in my diet.
It shouldn't. The glycemic-index (GI) measures how fast a food breaks down into glucose. Some foods don’t have any glucose (like fish or olive-oil) and some foods have a lot (like potatoes). Obviously eating the foods with little to no glucose will be low-GI, while foods with lots of glucose would be high-GI.
The GI is useless in terms of insulin-secretion. Some foods that are high-GI (like rice) make you secrete less insulin than beans (which are low-GI), beans cause a massive secretion of insulin. Beef is another food that is low-GI yet makes you secrete more insulin than pasta made of white-flour (which is high-GI) [1].
Saturated-fat and fructose are both low-GI, but are well known for their impairment of insulin signaling. Whole-grains are high-GI but are well known for their insulin sensitizing effects. Eating a low-GI diet guarantees you will eat a diet high in fat and protein. High-fat/high-protein diets are well known for causing many diseases and accelerating the aging process.
[1] Am J Clin Nutr. 1997 Nov;66(5):1264-76. An insulin index of foods: the insulin demand generated by 1000-kJ portions of common foods. Holt SH, Miller JC, Petocz P.
Edited by misterE, 09 November 2012 - 04:05 AM.
Also tagged with one or more of these keywords: tomato, raw, fruit, vegetable
1 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users














