Can Fake Junk Food Truly Satisfy?

Can Fake Junk Food Truly Satisfy?
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Sarah Moulton / AP

Zoodles—that’s short for “zucchini noodles”—are made with a kitchen gadget called a spiralizer, which shreds vegetables into long curly strands that enthusiasts compare, optimistically, to pasta.

The most committed have a spiralizer at home, which costs about $20 and is purportedly life-changing. Dabblers might shave zoodles with a vegetable peeler or buy them at Whole Foods, like I did, where they’re on display in the prepared foods section next to noodles made of squash and beets. Almost any dense vegetable can become a noodle (here's a guide); zoodles just have the catchiest name.

Vegetable noodles are just one example of a growing dietary trend of replacement instead of restriction. Healthy eaters, rather than just eating bland plates full of plants or completely cutting out foods they’ve deemed unhealthy, instead are using fruits and vegetables to create fake versions of the things they crave. Some seem more reasonable than others: Ripened bananas, frozen and blended, become ice cream; avocados, when pureed with cacao, transform into chocolate pudding; layered sandwiches, carefully decorated, form a sort of cake. Others seem less so: Slices of sweet potato, when buttered, imitate toast; a watermelon, topped with other fruits is supposedly pizza; avocados, sliced strategically areburger buns, however impractical that may be.

And that’s just what I’ve seen on the internet this summer, popularized by Buzzfeed Tasty, Pinterest, and YouTube stars.

Admittedly, some of these substitutions are old. When my family moved to the United States in 1997 and I saw spaghetti squash for the first time, my mom told me that people used them like real spaghetti. And apparently sandwich cakes made with fish are a traditional Swedish dish. I went to a bar last year and got a carrot hot dog, which was successful in the sense that it, like a genuine weiner, was a squishy log of sodium. Kale chips are regular fare at most grocery stores now.

Regardless, health-conscious eating in 2016 seems perfectly primed for a movement like this. The health-conscious have survived ascetic diets like Atkins that forced them to order sad, bun-less burgers, or count points with Weight Watchers, or drink liquid meals like SlimFast and now Soylent. Meanwhile, the surge in gluten-free and vegan eating has led food manufacturers to create closer imitations—fake chicken is decent, having achieved the texture and taste of overcooked chicken breast, and gluten-free flours make passable bread.

This trend tells us that we can have as much pizza and ice cream and pasta as we want. We just have to convince ourselves that they can be made of summer produce. We can eat anything now and have it be healthy; the only thing required is some mental gymnastics.

While I have my share of skepticism—for me, sweet potatoes will never equal the crunch of real toast—I understand why this way of eating might be so appealing. For those of us who have struggled with the hand wringing of dieting, food is fraught territory. Eating what we want to eat, without feeling judged or guilty, can seem like an impossible task. Maybe these replacements allow for that.

Of course, there are critics. Eater recently declared that toasters are for toast, not the dubious sweet potato. New York magazine regularly runs the latest offenses of “fake junk food.”

But despite the critiques, evangelists are staunch in their claim that this “fake junk food” works—even to a life-changing extent, like it has for Ali Maffucci, who runs the popular blog Inspiralized.

Maffucci’s first exposure to vegetable noodles was in 2013 when her diabetic mother, who was trying a raw vegan diet at the suggestion of a nutritionist, made her a zucchini noodle bowl. That night, Maffucci took home her mother’s spiralizer and soon after, she left a job in corporate America—she once worked in event and hotel management for Trump Golf—to start Inspiralized, which she has since spun off into two cookbooks and a branded spiralizer.

“The whole concept of having your cake and eating it too: That’s what spiralizing is all about. It’s taking a big bowl of ‘pasta,’ having it, tasting it, and it tastes just like pasta, except you feel good after, and you’re nourishing yourself,” she said.

For Maffucci, who says she’s had had issues with portion control and restricting in the past, eating this way is liberating—and I imagine that’s the case for many followers of the “fake junk food” lifestyle. Instead of diets that constantly forbid, this diet says that with creativity, anything is on the table.

“Those restrictive diets, you get discouraged when you go off the plan,” she said. “I think people can get frustrated by all those rules and regulations. With this, you’re creating a healthier, more inspired version of the original dish, so I think it’s more sustainable.”

According to Maffucci, who comes from an Italian-American family, she hasn’t cooked real pasta at home since she started Inspiralized three years ago—though she hasn’t cut it out of her life and doesn’t intend to.

“If you’re craving spaghetti with alfredo and you eat sweet potatoes with alfredo, the texture of the noodle is so similar to that of pasta that your brain is tricked. The sauce is what you’re craving anyway,” she said. “I’d rather have a bigger bowl of noodles than the little cup that you need to portion control yourself with regular pasta.”

If you can convince yourself that sweet potato noodles are noodles, then you can eat bowls of pasta without guilt. While that may be a boon for eaters who feel limited by the suggested serving sizes of wheat noodles, people eating larger portion sizes of fake noodles could be one of the downfalls of this eating trend, according to Kathleen Keller, a professor of nutritional sciences and food science at Penn State University.

Keller suggested that this trend might inspire the Snackwell effect, named after Nabisco’s line of fat-free snacks: dieters tend to eat more of the non-fat or low-calorie version of a food (Snackwell’s cookies, for example) than they would the normal version of that food. A 2008 study found that participants ate about 35 percent more when a snack was regarded as healthy than when it was seen as unhealthy.

“In the past when we’ve tried to substitute healthier versions for the real thing, that ends up backfiring because people just think, ‘Well, I ate these really healthy noodles so I can put a really rich sauce on them,’” Keller said.

So while vegetable noodles might be visually similar to pasta, the texture and taste differ enough that they might not fulfill expectations of pasta, leading eaters to compensate with toppings or by eating more in order to achieve a similar effect.

What’s more, Keller explained, there’s not as much energy per gram in vegetable-based junk foods, so it’s unlikely that eaters will feel the same sort of post-meal reward from them as from the real thing. Humans tend to prefer foods with a lot of energy in them because our early ancestors wanted to get as many calories as possible per meal, since they didn’t always know when they’d get more. So typically, calorie-dense foods like ice cream activate brain regions associated with reward more than less caloric foods like salad.

The solution might be in the mindset eaters take when trying replacements like this. Keller likened them to veggie burgers: If you want and expect a real hamburger, you’ll be disappointed with a veggie burger. But if you go into the meal ready for a veggie burger that’s different from a hamburger and tasty in its own way, then you might be satisfied with that.

“They shouldn’t necessarily be pitched as pasta, but they might be pitched as a really creative way to eat these vegetables,” Keller suggested. “You just have to set your expectations in line. It’s a different kind of product, so I think there’s a place for them.”

This story originally appeared on TheAtlantic.com.

Before You Go

Healthy Eating Guides From Around The World
United States(01 of08)
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The U.S. "MyPlate" guide to healthy eating uses a plate to display, roughly, how much of each kind of food you should eat at every meal. Fruits and vegetables should be varied and take up half the plate. The grains section should be at least 50 percent whole grains, the dairy should be low-fat milk or yogurt and the protein should also be varied.

Other MyPlate principles include eating the right number of calories for your age and height, avoiding saturated fat, sodium and added sugars, creating a supportive community that makes healthy eating easier.

The goal of these nutritional guidelines is to avoid obesity and chronic diseases.
(credit:choosemyplate.gov)
Japan(02 of08)
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Japan's food guide is modeled after the spinning top, a popular toy in the country. The guide is dish-based and features traditional Japanese cuisines like noodles, rice, mushroom and seaweed.

Experts note that the guide is high in carbohydrates like grains and vegetables, and low in fat -- an interesting detail to note, considering the many diet trends in the U.S. that call for lowering grains and increasing dietary fat.
(credit:Food and Agriculture Organization of the U.N.)
Brazil(03 of08)
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Brazil does not have an illustrated food guide. Rather, it has a list of ten principles for healthy eating, as well as a few photo examples of real meals that align to these principles.

These principles include advice to eat mostly natural, minimally processed foods, eat with company and be wary of food advertisements. They have been praised by experts for their holistic and progressive approach to healthy eating.

The photo above depicts four different dishes for dinner. They mostly include both rice and beans, which reflects the nation's culinary traditions. Vegetables make an appearance in all meals. Red meat is just one option for protein. Others include chicken, eggs and fish.
(credit:Brazil Ministry of Health)
China(04 of08)
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The Chinese Dietary Guidelines are illustrated with a pagoda. A person running toward the pagoda represents the importance of exercise. The base of the pagoda is made up of of grains like rice, bread and noodles. These starches, along with fruits and vegetables on the next level, should be the majority of any meal, the guidelines state.

Proteins like fish, meat, poultry and eggs should be eaten often but in small amounts, and then dairy and beans are on the top level. Fat, oil, and salt, which should be eaten sparingly, makes up the roof of the structure.
(credit:The Chinese Dietary Guidelines)
United Kingdom(05 of08)
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The U.K.'s "Eatwell Guide" states that both grains and fruits and vegetables should each make up over one-third of a person's total diet. The next largest food group is protein, which contains lentils and beans as well as the usual suspects fish, meat and poultry.

Dairy or dairy alternative foods should be low-fat, and oils are an important part of the diet but should be eaten in small amounts.

Food that is high in sugar, salt and fat are outside the circle because we don't need them to live and they should be eaten sparingly.
(credit:NHS)
South Africa(06 of08)
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South Africa's food guidelines were created to address two different populations: people who are undernourished and who need to eat more nutritious foods, and people who are struggling with being overweight and obese. They state that starchy foods should be a part of most meals and that fruits and vegetables should be eaten every day.

People should also drink milk, yogurt or maas (an African fermented milk) daily, as well as clean, safe water. Meat, fish and eggs can also be eaten daily, while things like beans, lentils and soy can be eaten regularly.

Their guidelines also address the dangers of eating tasty but nutritionally deficient food (foods high in sugar, salt and fat), especially for people who come from an undernourished background. From the report:

"It should also be remembered that when previously disadvantaged people who were hungry or food insecure at any time of their life are suddenly confronted with a wide variety of affordable and palatable food, their choices are not necessarily governed by what is healthy."
(credit:South African Journal of Clinical Nutrition)
Qatar(07 of08)
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Qatar recommends three to five servings of vegetables and two to four servings of fruits every day. For the other four food groups (cereals and starchy vegetables, legumes, dairy and dairy alternatives, and fish and meat), they recommend eating some from each group every day, but give no suggested serving size. Foods high in sugar, salt and fat are not depicted in the shell illustration.

The guidelines contain a special section on weight loss that emphasize the importance of sleep, exercise and social support. From the report:

"Do not obsess about weight. Stay positive, and focus on eating well and being active. If you have children that are overweight, this is even more important."
(credit:Qatar Supreme Council of Health)
Canada(08 of08)
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In addition to their rainbow-shaped food guide, Canada has also created a circular guide to address the traditional diets of the First Nations, Inuit and Metis people.

The guideline has serving size recommendations for traditional foods like whale and seal oil, bannock, seaweed and wild game.
(credit:Health Canada)

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