this post was submitted on 04 Mar 2025
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Prime Minister Christopher Luxon's suggestion of a Marmite sandwich and an apple for lunch wouldn't keep a child full or feed their brain sufficiently, according to local health and education experts.

"If you're just doing a Marmite sandwich and an apple, you're probably not meeting the protein requirements [which depend on age and gender]," paediatric dietician Jenny Douglas explained to RNZ.

"Ideally it would be a Marmite and cheese sandwich at least," she said, noting that the high salt content of Marmite, which could shape one's palate, giving a child a taste for salty snacks like pies and chips early on.

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[–] Dave@lemmy.nz 1 points 3 days ago

You can buy bacon without nitrates, but the nitrates are the yummy bit... it does make it pink but if you taste bacon with no added nitrates it's not the same.

In terms of dosage... this isn't really a case of benefits outweighing risks. I'm not aware of any health benefits of eating highly processed meat (that you couldn't get from the unprocessed equivalent). Easiest to minimise consumption to reduce the risk. I'll still eat it on a burger in the same way I'll still have the occasional beer even though alcohol is a known carcinogen, but I don't want processed meat to be an everyday food.