
They're in and then they're out. Poor old carbohydrates have taken quite a flogging over recent years as diet after diet hits the shelves, blaming these foods for expanding waistlines (and almost every chronic disease plaguing the Western world).
Yet health authorities and most dieticians continue to promote a high-carbohydrate diet as the healthy choice. It's little wonder so many people are completely confused about whose advice to follow.
There are elements of truth on both sides of the argument and that is because you cannot simply lump all carbohydrate-rich foods in one basket and say carbs are good or bad.
We have to consider the qualities of the individual food before we say whether it is a good or bad choice. So what would make a carb a good choice?
The best carbs will:
The worst carbs will:
Looking at carbs in this way makes it easy to see why there is so much controversy and it also makes it easy to see how we can reap the benefits without the pitfalls. The best-performing choices are obviously those that deliver as many of these positive attributes as possible.
These are the least common choices in most Western diets and it is therefore not surprising that carbs have been blamed for many of our ills.
There are many good reasons to include carbohydrates in your healthy eating menu, including:
This is an extract from Star Foods: selecting a winning team of foods for good health by Dr Joanna McMillan Price and Judy Davie. Published by ABC Books. RRP $35.