Network Magazine Autumn 2019 | Page 20

of bacteria in our gut. Some people have larger populations of a Bacteroidetes (a species of bacteria), which are better at extracting calories from tough plant cell walls than other bacteria species. Margins of error Nutrition Information labels can have a margin of error of up to 25% on the packet of every foodstuff in your local supermarket can be off by as much as 20-25%, making it hard to accurately gauge what your ‘energy in’ actually is. Even if those food labels were correct, there’s another reason that ‘energy in’ is no picnic to calculate. Reason 2: We don’t absorb all the energy we consume The amount of energy a food contains in the form of calories is not necessarily the amount of energy we absorb, store, and/or use. Remember that the food we eat has to be digested and processed by our unique bodies. The innumerable steps involved in digestion, processing, absorption, storage, and use — as well as our own individual physiological makeup — can all change the energy balance game. How processed? We absorb less energy from minimally processed carbohydrates and fats because they’re harder to digest, and we absorb more energy from highly processed carbohydrates and fats, because they’re easier to digest. The more processed a food is, the more digestion work is already done for you. Research has shown, for example, that we absorb more fat from peanut butter than from the same volume of whole peanuts. The researchers found that almost 38% of the fat in peanuts was excreted in the stool, rather than absorbed by the body, whereas seemingly all of the fat in the peanut butter was absorbed. How prepped? By eating a diet rich in whole, minimally processed foods, the number of calories you absorb can be significantly less than you may expect. Plus, they require more calories to digest. Conversely, you will absorb more calories by eating lots of highly processed foods, and burn fewer calories in the digestive process. In addition, highly processed foods are less filling, more energy dense, and more likely to cause overeating. Since the number of calories someone thinks they’re consuming could be off by 25% or more, their carefully curated daily intake of 1,600 calories could really be 1,200… or 2,000. Taking all of these factors into consideration, it becomes clear that this part of the equation should more accurately be: Energy In = Actual calories eaten - Calories not absorbed Clearly, there’s a big margin of error with regards energy input, even if you’re a conscientious calorie counter. This doesn’t invalidate the Energy Balance Equation. It just means that if you want an accurate calculation, you probably have to live in a fancy metabolic lab. For most people, it’s not worth the effort. Energy out ‘Energy out’ varies a lot from person to person: it’s a dynamic, always-changing variable. There are four key parts to this complex system: 1. Resting metabolic rate (RMR) RMR is the number of calories you burn each day at rest, just to breathe, think, and live. This represents roughly 60% of your ‘energy out’ and depends on weight, body composition, sex, age, genetic predisposition, and possibly (again) the bacterial population of your gut. A bigger body, in general, has a higher RMR, but, crucially, RMR varies up to 15% between individuals. So, a 90kg guy with an RMR of 1905 calories might find himself running alongside an identically- sized guy on the next treadmill who burns 286 more, or fewer, calories each day with no more, or less, effort. 2. Thermic effect of eating (TEE) The way in which a food is prepared and whether it is cooked can affect its bioavailability We often absorb more energy from foods that are cooked (and/or chopped, soaked, blended) because those processes break down plant and animal cells, increasing their bioavailability. When eating raw starchy foods (like sweet potatoes), we absorb very few of the calories. After cooking, however, the starches are much more available to us, tripling the number of calories absorbed. Interestingly, allowing starchy foods to then cool before eating them decreases the amount of calories we can extract from them again – mostly due to the formation of resistant starches. Gut bacteria We may absorb more or less energy depending on the types 20 | NETWORK AUTUMN 2019 The less processed a food is, the greater the amount of energy you will burn digesting it Digestion is an active metabolic process. Thermic effect of eating (TEE) is the number of calories you burn by eating, digesting and processing your food. This represents roughly 5-10% of your ‘energy out’. In general, you’ll burn more calories in your effort to digest and absorb protein (20-30% of its calories) and carbs (5-6%) than you do fats (3%). And, as noted before, you’ll burn more calories digesting minimally processed whole foods than you will highly processed foods.