• Kalkaline
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    462 months ago

    If this chart is meaningful for you, Kamala Harris will not be raising your taxes.

    • @ericbombOP
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      2 months ago

      https://lemmy.world/post/19883899

      It’s important to eat well and remember that if you made 7 thousand dollars a day since the birth of Christ, you still wouldn’t have as much money as Bezos.

      EDIT: An hour! I was trying to be dramatic and failed!

      • @Frozengyro
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        2 months ago

        7 thousand an hour, would still be shy of bezos’s wealth.

  • @[email protected]
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    132 months ago

    Not including protein powders in the protein chart is pretty stupid. Whey protein is cheaper per gram than anything else on that chart, and vegan protein powders (like soy or pea protein) are even cheaper

    • @[email protected]
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      72 months ago

      Yeah corn syrup be about a couple of cents on this plot.

      It would be much more interesting to see this in terms of a combination of protein, unsaturated fats And micronutrients.

      Like which combination is the cheapest of all?

      I suspect it would be something like:

      • Peanut butter (mono)
      • Sunflower oil (poly)
      • WPC (protein with good amino profile)
      • Celery (insoluble fiber)
      • Psyllium husk (soluble fiber)
      • Rice (carbs, low gi)
      • @slumberlust
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        12 months ago

        Let’s call out complete proteins too. Otherwise you still have to mix and match food sources. Soy would probably win.

        • @[email protected]
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          22 months ago

          It depends on the country for soy. Objectively in the absence of interference, it’s cheaper and still relatively complete.

          But for whatever reason, a lot of Western governments like the US and Australia heavily subsidise animal proteins, so I think in those regions WPC still has a slight edge.

          Then again a lot of people struggle with lactose And soy is probably cheaper than WPI.

          Gainz is work haha.

  • @whereisk
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    92 months ago

    Pistachios seem awfully cheap from what I know pistachios to cost even considering high caloric density.

    • @ericbombOP
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      52 months ago

      https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07PBKZZ51?tag=sacapuntas9-20&linkCode=osi&th=1&psc=1

      4160 calories for 14.23

      Coming out to 292 calories per dollar, or around 30 cents for 100 calories. Looks to be about where it’s at! He might have found an even cheaper source. I think this chart does a great job of pointing out that just because things like almonds are more per pound than chicken, doesn’t mean they aren’t better deals if you are concerned with energy.

      • @whereisk
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        62 months ago

        Wow, they are incredibly cheap in the US - in Australia they are nearly double the price per kg.

        • @ericbombOP
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          32 months ago

          Oh yeah he mentions his source is Walmart in a specific state, but amazon is more consistent here.

          Always interesting to hear how different stuff is in different countries!

        • Ephera
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          32 months ago

          Yeah, the US is one of the big producers. Wikipedia says:

          In 2022, world production of pistachios was one million tonnes, with the United States, Iran, and Turkey combined accounting for 88% of the total.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pistachio

  • @Ersatz86
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    92 months ago

    Really superb and informational graphic. I’d sure love to see one done by protein per gram/cost. Any chance someone could reach out to the Reddit OP to ask, cause my privileges have been revoked? Pretty please?

        • @[email protected]
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          32 months ago

          I so wish we could get actual wheat grains at the supermarket, possibly bio. Instead whole cereals are mostly sold as animal feed (so with fewer safety standards). It’s bs. Same goes for soy beans! They give 'em out to farmers for a lot less than a 1€/kg as animal feed, but I have to order them online? While every corner shop has tofu, soy milk, etc… come on 😅

      • @Ersatz86
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        12 months ago

        Well yay! Thank you for passing that along and kudos to OP.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 months ago

      I remember seeing a youtube vid from someone who had analyzed all products from one supermarket (after scraping their website), cheapest protein ended up being flour 😄

      After all people can survive on bread, on average if I remember correctly we need just 11-13% of the calories to be protein according to WHO (or less if we are eating with a caloric surplus)… protein needs are vastly exaggerated thanks to health gurus and humans’ unhealthy love of meat.

      Btw flour and bread are not all the same, especially refined has very little fiber and a little less protein (protein content is used also to determine quality of wheat)

  • @[email protected]
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    92 months ago

    nice graph, what is the “calories per gram of food” or “caloric density” dimension/axis good for?

    only use-case i can think of is something like packing food for hiking? other than that calories per gram of food is quite irrelevant, or am i missing something?

    • @mipadaitu
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      2 months ago

      Some people walk to get groceries.

      edit: on the flip side, if you’re trying to lose weight, then eating low density food would probably fill you up faster. So more apples and less sunflower seeds.

    • @ericbombOP
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      62 months ago

      I think it’s good to point out how dense they are when shopping. Cause you might be like “walnuts are so expensive per pound, no way they’re worth it!” when really they are, they are just crazy dense.

      Also if you are caring about “bulk” eating, where you want to make sure your stomach feels full all day, you want more things on the left side cause you’ll feel like you are eating more food.

      so it is interesting I felt!

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        yes, interesting, i just wondered if i’m missing something, maybe my statement was a bit too negative :-/

        • @MutilationWave
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          22 months ago

          People who live in poverty could use this graph to plan the cheapest way to get their calories to avoid starving with very little money.

          Is that what you’re missing?

  • @davidgro
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    72 months ago

    So where is “bag of sugar” on this chart?

  • @Etterra
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    62 months ago

    There’s a dock worker strike on the East Coast. That banana price is going to skyrocket for a little while.

    • @ericbombOP
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      72 months ago

      Fingers crossed for them! I hope they get the wages they need to not need to live by this chart, and guarantees that even as the docks modernize the workers will have good paying jobs regardless.

  • @Dkarma
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    62 months ago

    I’m calling BS on tuna being more expensive than chix wings…depends on grade of tuna. Wings are expensive AF!

    • @ericbombOP
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      2 months ago

      Well we can easily check! It says they used Walmart.

      Here’s the cheapest per ounce I see for tuna:

      https://www.walmart.com/ip/Great-Value-Chunk-Light-Tuna-in-Water-5-oz-4-Pack/33867594?classType=VARIANT&athbdg=L1200&from=/search

      It’s 3.22 for 400 calories, so one dollar gets you 124 calories of tuna.

      Then cheapest wings I see at $3 a pound, and have 4,840 calories for 24 dollars, coming out to 200 calories per dollar:

      https://www.walmart.com/ip/Great-Value-All-Natural-Chicken-Wing-Sections-8-lb-Frozen/124310906?classType=REGULAR&from=/search

      So for me doing the math JUST off packaging (he appears to use a nutritional calculator) it’s coming up chicken wings is cheaper source of calories.

      So it’s possible in this persons state their chicken was slightly cheaper, and they didn’t have the generic tuna. But even in my state where chicken costs a little bit more than what is listed, and my tuna costs a little less, chicken wings are still close to 50% cheaper for calories.

      I wonder if it’s just a “Feeling” thing, because a little can of tuna is just a dollar! That must be cheap, right?.. but a can of tuna is 100 calories, which isn’t a great deal.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      Idk what their source was but I think you should look for cheapest “possible” to do a fair comparison (cause obviously a certain shop can have super expensive wings). Near me lowest for wings will be 3-5€/kg, canned tuna starts from 8/kg when on discount, but also has like 30% of seed or olive oil in it (so actual tuna cost to the consumer is more like 12€/kg minimum) Chicken is definitely cheaper everywhere IME.

      BTW I’m talking raw chicken wings…everything pre-cooked costs more

    • socsa
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      32 months ago

      That depends on where you are what time of year it is. I can get wings on sale for $1.99/lb fairly regular. The only fish I can get that cheap is tilapia.

      • @ericbombOP
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        Yeah canned tuna is almost always a dollar for a dinky little can of 100 calories. A pound of wings has many times that, with the online one I found being $3/lb.

        So I guess this chart is doing a pretty good job at breaking up some preconceived notions!

  • KaRunChiy
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    52 months ago

    Being a budget minded shopper these last few years, this all checks out

    • @ericbombOP
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      42 months ago

      Yeah shouldn’t a real shocker for anyone who compares prices and calories!

      Only thing that caught me off guard is pork belly is chilling down by potatoes in cost per calorie! But given how fatty pork belly is, I guess it makes sense!

  • @OhmsLawn
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    52 months ago

    Dairy would be helpful.

  • @Illegalmexicant
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    42 months ago

    We need a graph of vending machine items cost-per-calorie. I know I could get an 800 calorie honeybun for $1. But that was 2000s numbers.

  • @Smokeydope
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    32 months ago

    Very good chart thanks for sharing

  • @[email protected]
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    22 months ago

    Locally at least Costco precooked chicken nuggets are 6.99 a kg which is the cheapest meat they have I think

  • @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    I bought walnut once in my life. To this day, I regret the waste of money. There are so common, I cannot understand how I manage not to have some foraged freely in the nature…

      • @[email protected]
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        32 months ago

        I do it every year. Maybe, we don’t have the same kind of walnuts but in my area walnut trees are common enough to go to the woods, find a place with a few trees and fill a 50L bag of nuts in an hour. Do it with two or three people, twice or thrice during the season and the whole extended family have enough walnut for regular consomption until the next automn. When dried properly the walnuts last up to 3 years in their shell. A bit less than 2 years shelled in an airtight box. You do a bunch of in fall and you break the rest progressively during the year, while watching TV.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 months ago

            Yes. Or some other species close to it. I usually forage tree types of walnuts but I don’t know their names.
            I once found a ornamental Juglans Nigra tree that my city have marked as “American walnut tree” and picked 10 or 15 nuts. It took me days just to open 3. It was tasty though.

            Are these types of nuts sold in shops? In never saw anything but European walnuts and the taste and texture are very different.