ZOE Science & Nutrition - 3 simple steps to transform your metabolism | Shawn Stevenson and Prof. Tim Spector
Episode Date: February 6, 2025Only 12% of American adults are considered metabolically healthy - meaning the vast majority are at increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, and strokes. But what exactly is metabolism, and why does... it matter so much for our health? In this episode, bestselling author and health expert Shawn Stevenson joins world-renowned scientist Professor Tim Spector to break down the science of metabolism. They’ll debunk the myth of “metabolic rate” and explain why it’s not just about how fast you burn calories - but how your body processes and uses them. You'll discover how poor sleep, stress, and ultra-processed foods are impacting your metabolic health - and how this sets the stage for weight gain and chronic disease. More importantly, Shawn and Tim will share the simple, science-backed habits that can improve your metabolism, from eating nutrient-dense foods to optimizing movement and sleep. 🥑 Make smarter food choices. Become a member at zoe.com - 10% off with code PODCAST 🌱 Try our new plant based wholefood supplement - Daily 30+ *Naturally high in copper which contributes to normal energy yielding metabolism and the normal function of the immune system Follow ZOE on Instagram. Timecodes 00:00 The truth about your metabolism 04:00 What metabolism actually is 07:30 How ultra-processed food slows metabolism 10:20 Why most people aren’t metabolically healthy 14:00 Food shapes your body’s energy system 18:40 Brain inflammation and metabolism 22:50 How processed food changes calorie burn 27:15 Chemicals in food and air affect health 30:40 Why ultra-processed food harms children most 34:10 How processed food makes us overeat 38:25 Artificial ingredients and gut health 42:10 Can mitochondria be ‘hacked’? 45:00 Poor sleep increases fat storage 48:15 The biggest mistake before bed 50:30 Why breakfast matters for metabolism 52:40 Foods that spike blood sugar 54:20 Tim Spector’s go-to breakfast 55:50 One simple swap to improve metabolism 📚Books by our ZOE Scientists The Food For Life Cookbook Every Body Should Know This by Dr Federica Amati Food For Life by Prof. Tim Spector Free resources from ZOE Live Healthier: Top 10 Tips From ZOE Science & Nutrition Gut Guide - For a Healthier Microbiome in Weeks Mentioned in today's episode Examining Variations of Resting Metabolic Rate of Adults: A Public Health Perspective, 2013, published in Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, Daily energy expenditure through the human life course, 2021, published in Science Postprandial energy expenditure in whole-food and processed-food meals: implications for daily energy expenditure, 2010, published in Food and Nutrition Research The Relationship between Sleep Duration and Metabolic Syndrome Severity Scores in Emerging Adults, 2023, published in Nutrients Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here. Episode transcripts are available here.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to ZOE, Science and Nutrition, where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health.
I want you to picture a factory building cars.
It's full of machinery and workers that are taking various parts and assembling them into shiny new automobiles.
But one day, every car that comes off that production line has a defect.
A broken window, a missing tyre, a faulty engine.
So what to do? Fix each individual car?
Or go to the root of the problem and fix the factory?
This production line catastrophe can happen in our bodies, but instead of a
faulty engine we have heart disease, diabetes, obesity. To tackle these problems in the long
run we must fix the factories in our cells. And that is called metabolism. And a recent study found that a staggering 88% of us are not metabolically healthy.
Host of the Model Health Show, Sean Stevenson is author of two best-selling books,
Eat Smarter and Sleep Smarter, that look at the close relationship between our lifestyle and
metabolism. Today, Sean is joined by Tim Spector. Tim is one of the world's top 100 most cited scientists, a professor of epidemiology, and
my scientific co-founder at ZOE.
By the end of this episode, you'll understand how your metabolism works and how to ensure
it safeguards your long-term health.
If you're looking to improve your metabolic health, you may be familiar with the experience
of eating foods that make your blood sugar crash a few hours after eating.
Let me suggest you check out Zoe's Personalised Nutrition Programme.
Because the food you eat isn't only making you tired, it's making you sick.
Did you know that 60% of our calories now come from ultra-processed foods?
They're cheap.
They're often loaded with sugar and
saturated fats. They can last on your shelf for years and they're engineered to keep you hooked.
But every day there's more evidence that links ultra-processed food with obesity, cancer,
depression and many other diseases. We live with a food system that's rigged against us.
Zoe's personalized nutrition program helps you break free.
We point you towards the smartest food choices for you, and we'll make it easy too.
Visit zoe.com to get your at-home test kit and Personalised Nutrition Program today.
OK, let's get on with today's episode with Sean Stevenson and Professor Tim Spector.
episode with Sean Stevenson and Professor Tim Spector.
Sean, thank you for joining me today. It is my pleasure to be here.
And Tim, always great to have you here.
Me too.
So Sean, we have a tradition here at ZOE where we always start with a quick fire round of questions from our listeners.
We have very strict rules. You can say yes or no, or if you have to a one sentence answer.
Okay.
Are you willing to give it a go?
I'll give it a shot.
All right.
Are most people metabolically healthy?
No.
Can you always tell if someone has bad metabolic health because
they will be overweight?
No.
Is a faster metabolism better for your health?
Not necessarily.
And Tim, can the type of food you eat change your metabolism?
Yes.
Can changing how you sleep improve your metabolism?
Definitely.
And finally, Sean, what's the most common misconception about metabolism?
That it's just about converting food into energy.
And it's not?
Absolutely not.
Well, I think that's a brilliant introduction into what we're going to get into now.
Firstly, we've never done a podcast specifically on metabolism.
And secondly, I really don't understand what it is despite the fact that the word has come up so often.
So I'd love to start right at the very beginning.
Sean, what is metabolism and why does it matter?
From a rudimentary perspective, it's converting food into energy.
But that's looking at energy through this very isolated vanilla way.
You know, there's this entire microcosm of events.
And metabolism is really about the sum of all the different pieces that can create and generate energy and that feed into each other.
And for me, it's really based on that principle of energy cannot be created nor destroyed.
It can only be converted from one form into another.
And so this energy exchange, even if we're looking at that very vanilla version of it, of food
is creating energy, where does the food come from?
What are the pieces and parts of the food that create the energy?
And there are other things besides food that are getting converted into energy for us as
well.
And whether that's body fat, whether that is oxygen and how it relates to all these different pieces.
There are literally millions of parts and inputs that determine metabolism.
It isn't just food.
And even from the perspective of food being used as energy, the end point being the mitochondria,
which we'll get to I'm sure and talk a lot about.
When we eat a food, it doesn't just become energy. It gets converted
into a currency that our body can actually use. Our body runs on a certain currency.
And so there's so much work involved in converting that food into the currency that our body can use.
And sometimes that conversion doesn't happen, right? Our body isn't converting everything
that we eat into that currency that we're using. Sean could you talk me through that maybe in a very simple way like let's imagine I eat a piece of bread.
Let's use actually a good example since you mentioned bread alright there's this fascinating study published recently in the journal food and nutrition research.
And they had test subjects to and this is is a crossover study, so everybody's doing both things,
to consume a sandwich of either whole multigrain bread and cheddar cheese,
or a sandwich of what they deem to be ultra processed food, which was white bread and
cheese product. And here in the United States, like Kraft is a big cheese company, that's what
I grew up eating, but it's called Kraft singles because they can't
leave legally call it cheese.
There's not enough cheese in the cheese.
And so it's this kind of cheese product, right?
And so they had to subject to consume both sandwiches at different parts of the study.
Now keep in mind, these sandwiches have the same amount of protein, fats,
carbohydrates, and the same amount of calories.
But when they ate the two different versions of these sandwiches, very different things
happened with their metabolism, in particular, the expenditure of the calories they consumed.
So when people ate the processed food sandwich versus the whole food sandwich, they had about
a 50% reduction in calorie expenditure or calorie burn after eating that processed food sandwich.
Something happened and to create a very simple understanding, it basically created metabolic
clogs.
It blocked the body's ability to use that energy efficiently and to get rid of it.
And so what does our body do?
It's going to do what it can to protect us.
And if even that means holding on to some of these calories
to try to figure out what to do with this later at some point,
and not to mention all the other pieces that come along with that,
it's not just the calories from the food.
And as Tim knows this as well,
there's a lot of other compounds that come along with ultra-processed
foods, whether this is, you know, thylates, whether this is, you know, pesticides and
all these other things that can disrupt our metabolism.
And so when it boils down to it, if we can just kind of consolidate this whole idea,
when we're choosing to eat a certain food, it's not just this calorie conversation.
And Tim and I talked a lot about this when I had
him on my show. It's so much bigger. There are all these, and this is the term I want
to share with everybody, epicaloric controllers. There are these epicaloric controllers that
are determining how our body is processing the food that we're eating. Today we're going
to expand from the conversation
of just calories and understand that our metabolism when it boils down to it, it is the conversion
of food into energy. Yes, but there are all these other really wonderful factors for us
to pay attention to. And today I want to help everybody to just refine it to some very simple
ideas because it can some very simple ideas,
because it can be complex, obviously, there's so many pieces to cover.
But today I want to share some of the like top things that are the epi-calor controllers
that we can apply in our lives to make better choices and to have a more efficient metabolism
overall. That study you referred to was that short-term metabolism
or long-term, because I think people often get confused
because in a way the long-term might be more important
as the body resets, whether it's from exercise or eating.
Do you want to try and help us through that?
Because I always find that one of the hardest things
when we talk about metabolism is this,
the short-term one of the hardest things when we talk about metabolism is this, the
short-term reaction of the body and then what's the long-term rate?
That's such a great question that only you would ask, of course.
What we're looking at here is exactly that.
It was a short-term effect, right?
So there's a 50% reduction in expenditure of calories in the short-term.
But long-term, what does that look like?
Well, the body's going to find a way
to get rid of a lot of that energy,
but there's this residual effect
as you're doing that day after day after day
and this kind of compounding reverse interest in a way
in making it harder and harder and harder for us
to have that long-term energy expenditure.
And so it's just taking a snapshot.
And that's the thing about these studies.
They're always looking at things in these snapshot moments
and life is so much more dynamic.
You look to these two different meals,
it looked almost the same.
Like in theory, they like bread and cheese,
bread and cheese, but one is sort of ultra processed
and one is sort of much more whole grain
and natural and real cheese.
And you're saying that metabolism is the way
that you convert food into energy.
But although both of them had the same number of calories,
you think that like the metabolism has to be the same.
You're saying that with this ultra processed food,
somehow your body's metabolism was completely different.
And it's sort of held on to like a whole bunch
of those calories and stored them as fat basically.
Whereas with that more natural
food it sort of burnt them up, even though they were the same calories.
Did I understand that right?
Now we can't say that study doesn't reveal whether or not it's getting stored as fat
per se, but the body is slowing down its processing of that energy.
There's going to be a tendency, especially over time, that more and more of that's going
to get stored as fat.
But as Tim mentioned, in the short term, it can just be everything's kind of slowing down.
Your body, from my perspective, is just trying to figure out what to do with this stuff because
it is newly invented.
And based on the things we really evolved eating, where we have a level of efficiency,
and our bodies are incredibly intelligent and resilient. So they can figure out how to process that cheese product,
you know, if it's forced to.
But ideally is that optimal?
Probably not.
I think the following question
that was one of the top questions that we had
was around metabolic health.
So just as I think I'm still a bit confused really
about exactly what metabolism is,
I'm definitely also confused
about what metabolic health is.
What does it mean?
I love that this is a big part of the conversation today
because, you know, when I graduated from college, I studied nutrition.
I studied biochemistry and I was not taught about, quote, metabolic health.
All right. It's just like even in my first nutritional science class, you know
We were first of all, we were taught the food pyramid. This was the the 90s my teacher the professor was basically
You know, he came in and he shared that you know, if you want to lose weight you
Expend more energy than you take in right?
the simple is that if you want to gain weight you consume more calories than you expend and
that that was it if you want to stay weight, you consume more calories than you expend. And that was it.
If you want to stay the same, they need to be the same.
And a little side note, and I don't talk about this often,
but my teacher was significantly overweight.
I'm not saying that, you know,
this was a character flaw or anything like that,
but I'm sure that he was doing a lot of things
that he was trying to teach us,
but they just simply weren't working for him.
And he just needed needed in his mind,
I just need to cut more calories, I need to do better.
And we start to punish ourselves
because this dogma that we've been taught isn't working out.
And it does work for some people.
It does work for some people because at the time
he's teaching us and he's applying,
we need to eat seven to 11 servings
of quote healthy whole grains every day.
And that's the basis of our diet.
And so some of the principles that I took from that
is basically, you know, if it's white, it's not right.
All right, so no more refined carbohydrates.
I'm not gonna eat this regular pasta that I grew up eating.
Let me get whole wheat pasta, right?
I'm not gonna eat the white bread that I grew up eating, let me get whole wheat pasta, right? I'm not gonna eat the white bread that I grew up eating.
In the United States, it's like Wonder Bread and bunny bread.
And now I'm gonna eat whole grain bread.
I'm gonna eat a lot of brown food.
And this is not taking into account
my unique metabolic fingerprint, right?
So these are some of the things that go into
our own unique metabolic fingerprint
and our own unique metabolic health.
Part of that is our own unique microbial fingerprint.
What if somebody has a hard time with their microbial makeup trying to process a lot of
these, quote, healthy whole grains?
What is that going to do to their metabolic health?
What is that going to do to their metabolic health? What is that going to do to their energy, assimilation and expenditure? All this stuff matters. We can't have this
kind of cookie cutter approach to things.
An example that really like it stayed with me for years that I couldn't understand. I
would go to this Chinese food restaurant that was right off campus. And I was like wondering why the store owner
and their family, I would go around the time
when they're having their lunch
and they were like eating white rice
and like steamed vegetables.
And I'm just like, why are they eating white rice?
Don't they know that, you know,
this is so much better for you to eat a brown rice.
And what it was truly, if you, you know,
my wife is from Africa as well, she's from Kenya,
and they've been eating white rice for a long time. Yes, there can be parts of the container or the
brand of certain things that can add fiber, but they can also be a gut irritant for a lot of people
as well. And so I think some people, our ancestors figured out centuries ago that if we want to efficiently process this food without side effects, if we're looking for caloric energy, right, if that's our goal with this thing, we might want to get rid of this because it can create some gut irritation for some people.
getting that background education and not being taught what metabolic health is, which is what is right for me right now to efficiently process my food, to feel
good, to of course a body composition can come into the mix as well. It's like
out-picturing and your opening like rapid-fire question was can we have
out-picturing of fitness and still be metabolically unhealthy?
Absolutely.
But it is a part of the equation.
There are all these different parts.
And so, ultimately, and the most recent data
here in the United States,
and again, I think that the number,
of course it can shift a little bit,
but I think it's pretty close.
Only 12% of United States citizens are metabolically healthy.
Only 12%. Only 12%. That should States citizens are metabolically healthy. Only 12%.
Only 12%. That should be outrageous, like blow our minds. But the question is, again,
this is what we're talking about. What does that mean? What is metabolic health? Well,
in this particular study, they were looking at, you know, triglyceride levels, they were
looking at HDL and LDL ratios, they were looking at, yes, body composition, body fat percentage, and things
like that. But it's still looking at things through a very small frame. So I'm not going
to be the guy that comes on this show and tells you this is exactly what metabolic health
is.
You know, I have this problem writing books to, you know, to the public to try and explain
metabolism. Yeah. My editor says, what is metabolism, metabolic health?
Well, the best way I described it,
and I love your thoughts on it,
is it's the energy management system of the body
and its efficiency.
It's how all the bits in the body work together
and how efficient it is, or whether it's inefficient
and it's having to work too hard
to keep the house warm or cool or whatever it is or whether it's inefficient and it's having to work too hard to keep the house warm or cool or whatever it is is keeping it exactly at that right
temperature all the time regardless of what you're doing. Do you think that's a
reasonable way to... Absolutely, efficiency is such a key word in this but that can
be misconstrued because we can be very efficient in converting that white rice into glucose
and shoot up our blood glucose, have a huge response from insulin.
Yeah, it's efficient to convert that into energy, but is that metabolically healthy for us?
And so we've got to take into account that efficiency means multiple things as well.
Yeah, it means not having side effects and means not having other things happen to the system
that make it go wrong, I guess.
I was just thinking that you were talking about the,
you know, the white rice and then the brown rice
and the white bread and the brown red.
And, you know, both Tim and I have both done
the Zoe test team, where it was part of it,
you get your own blood sugar.
And probably, you know, many of the listeners
on this podcast have also been members of Done That. And I think one of the things that I remember being most shocked by
was a whole bunch of things that I thought were really healthy because they were brown.
And so like the first time I ate brown bread and I spiked my blood sugar so much, and just like Tim,
my wife's blood sugar spiked a lot less than mine, which was sort of annoying and like brown rice,
like off the roof.
So definitely have had that personal experience
you were talking about, about how your metabolism
is dealing with this, not at all in the sort of nice,
easy way that I had always assumed
because I've been told that this stuff
was sort of fine for me.
Yeah, and that can be explained
through a number of mechanisms, right?
One could be inflammation.
There could be this inflammatory response
that's causing some disruption with how your body's handling that. And that reminds me
of a study, this was conducted by researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine
recently. And they found that and this is a huge issue that people are talking about
in relationship to metabolism. Inflammation, yes, but specifically neuroinflammation. And
these researchers were looking at hypothalamic inflammation.
So the hypothalamus is kind of glorified
as like a master gland in our brain
that's controlling a lot of things downstream.
It's an integration of our nervous system
and our endocrine system.
So our hormones and also our nervous system.
And what they found was that people who had inflammation
in their brain, hypothalamic inflammation, had the accumulation of more belly fat and body fat downstream and a higher
level of insulin resistance.
Now here's the catch.
People with more insulin resistance and more body fat also had higher rates of inflammation
in their brain.
So it was like this vicious circle that's creating all this metabolic unrest. So
their metabolic health is suffering because of inflammation in their brain. But it's just,
it's the chicken or the egg scenario, like which one came first, you know, which one's causing which.
And of course, I'm holding back on sharing solutions right out of the gate, but I got to
share one really quickly, if that's okay. I got to share one. You couldn't, you couldn't. Right.
right out of the gate, but I got to share one really quickly. If that's okay, I got to share one.
Okay.
Oh, you couldn't, you couldn't wait.
So researchers at Auburn university here in the U S found out that there's
this really remarkable food that can help to address this neuroinflammation.
It's a food that's been used for thousands of years, of course.
And it's oleocanthal rich extra virgin olive oil.
They found that it was able to reduce inflammation
in the brain, specifically helping to repair
and support the blood brain barrier.
Because part of the reason this inflammation epidemic
is happening in the brain is that things are getting
into the brain that shouldn't be there.
There's a breakdown of the blood brain barrier
that's happening because of the environment that we live in.
We could get into all the different reasons why,
but it's mayhem.
And if people are wondering like, is my brain inflamed?
Chances are, yes, you know,
especially if we're not metabolically healthy.
And the question would be,
well, why doesn't my doctor know this?
The brain is very protective, you know,
this isn't something that you're going to notice per se,
unless you have very, very sophisticated imaging and all these
different tests done. It's just a place that we're not looking. But I'm telling
you right now, people that are listening to a show like this, they're always ahead
of the curve. And so you're going to hear more about this in the years coming up,
I'm sure, about neuroinflammation, the downstream effects with metabolic health,
and also body fat causing more neuroinflammation.
And you're saying the magic properties
of extra virgin olive oil on the brain,
as well as in other things that might have been studied before.
Yeah, and one of the benefits of that extra virgin olive oil
is it tends to be anti-inflammatory, yes.
You mentioned a few minutes ago this idea
that only 12% of adults in the US
are metabolically healthy,
which is an extraordinary number.
And I know that across Europe
and the rest of the Western world,
these numbers are not very different.
I'd love to understand what that means.
And Tim, you're a doctor.
What does it mean if someone is metabolically unhealthy
for their long-term health?
Well, classically, it's been associated with many common disorders.
So the main one has been type 2 diabetes.
So you're much more prone to have type 2 diabetes if things are unstable in a way.
And that just means that the amount of insulin you're producing relative amount of sugar
is out of kilter and therefore there's more stress on the system, therefore you're more likely
to end up with tight tube diabetes.
Also means you're more likely to have increased risk of heart disease, increased blood lipids
and inflammation in your arteries.
Your blood pressure is more likely to be raised, therefore you're getting hypertension and
then get strokes, et cetera.
And increasingly, it's also been linked to brain disorders as we're discussing, but the
big one at the moment is the increase in dementia, which has also been termed as type 3 diabetes
because of the increase in both conditions in many countries.
So having a disordered metabolic condition really predisposes you to all kinds of conditions
and there's probably many more that we don't yet associate with it.
Just because your basic system is not functioning properly, which means that the rest of the
body is struggling to keep up as well.
So as well as these individual problems that we're seeing with glucose and sugar and insulin
and blood vessels, the whole system is just working too hard, I think is the way I see
it and therefore your body can't repair itself as well as it could otherwise.
And also you get this other problem of inflammation coming in
due to the fact that your basic energy system
is not really on its top game, it's starting to wobble.
I'm trying to think of an analogy,
I haven't got a very good one,
but this isn't my analogy a bit like,
I know I need to have the oil always needs to be topped up
in my car, it's one of those things that they do
when they check on it, in order for it to run fine.
And my car runs these days for like 10, 12 years without anything going wrong anymore.
But if for some reason I let all the oil like run low and I keep running it, then I
know I'm sort of causing all this damage to this car and my car is going to like,
something's going to go horribly wrong after like three years or four years.
Is that how I think about it?
It's not like this big collapse immediately. It's like ongoing damage. Well, whether it's your car or it's the boiler
in your house that's leaking in order to keep your house heated at the perfect temperature,
you're having to sort of put more fuel in, it's less efficient, and every now and again,
it's going to break down or and cause other problems. I think that's probably more the way to see it.
And you might end up with rust in the system and things that wouldn't happen if it was
really in its tip-top state.
But therein lies the problem with trying to consolidate metabolic health into, is it the
oil?
Right?
We've got engine coolant.
We've got gasoline, right gasoline to run your car.
We've got even the windshield wiper fluid could be a problem if it starts raining.
It's all of these factors that are impacting the performance of our human vehicle.
We can't consolidate it.
Wonderful researchers are trying to.
That study that I mentioned with the 12%, right? We're looking at cardio metabolic factors, but what about how your body is handling insulin
and blood sugar and all these different things?
But none of these things are happening in a vacuum
and they're all affecting each other at the same time.
There isn't a cell in your body that's not being affected
by the activities of all of your other cells.
We have trillions of cells
and it's a cellular community. I like this idea, all your cells are working together in harmony,
that's like you're now that you know these systems are working really great. What are the simple
things that have changed that means that you know now you're describing almost everybody as not being
metabolically healthy and presumably 100 years ago they were. What are the key things?
To use one word to kind of encompass is environment the environment that were existing is very different than a hundred years ago very very different.
And whether this is the environment exposure itself you know there are billions and billions and billions of newly invented chemicals that are released into the environment here in the US alone.
released into the environment here in the US alone. And this is allowed by the way, by the EPA,
the Environmental Protection Agency,
supposed to be protecting.
And that's the thing too,
we are a part of the environment as well.
We tend to separate humans and environment.
We're a part of the environment.
And so just the air that we're breathing is different.
And recently I was having a conversation
about these PFAS chemicals are these forever chemicals that are just a part of our lives today and he's the ones on Teflon and you know the
frying pans and
cookware and things DuPont thanks to DuPont, you know, this is back around the 1940s and
Teflon
Which again just look at this incredible innovation.
But now the result of that, the fallout of that is that 98% of people tested on planet
Earth, I'm talking about from Alaska to Hawaii, 98% of people now have DuPont's chemicals
in their blood.
And the researchers had to go back and look at blood from pre that time, you know, around,
you know, from soldiers to find blood
that was clear of these compounds.
And so the air we're breathing,
the chemical exposure, whether it's through, you know,
cooking and the fumes.
And this is going back to another thing
about our metabolic health and energy we're using.
It's not just the things we're eating, it's also what we're inhaling as well is used as
energy and conversion.
And so obviously the food, our food culture is very, very different than our ancestors.
And you know, I've been talking a lot about this and shouting this from the rooftops.
And one of my latest projects really helped to create a shift
in this conversation.
My book, Eat Smarter, a few years back,
in talking about this processed food environment,
ultra-processed food environment.
And according to the BMJ, actually,
over 60% of the average American's diet
is now made of ultra-processed, newly invented food.
But the numbers are even worse for US children.
And this was published in JAMA, the Journal of the American Animal Association.
They're even worse for UK children than US ones, most recent data.
Oh, yeah.
And this is the thing, as that's being implemented deeper into the culture, those children are
now going to pass and it's just going to get worse and worse.
So about 70% of US children's diet is made of ultra-processed, newly invented food.
And that number is just continuing to climb.
And this isn't just a US phenomenon, obviously,
but the question is, what is that?
What are ultra processed foods?
Humans have been processing food for a very long time.
All right, just to be clear,
if you're taking that olive oil, for example,
where does it come from?
We're doing a process to get the olive oil out
of the olives, but traditionally it come from? We're doing a process to get the olive oil out of the olives.
But traditionally, it's a cold process. It's a stone process. You're smashing the oil,
collecting the oil. It's very simple, right? Ultra processed foods, on the other hand, is when
you have a field of corn that somehow, some way gets turned into a box of lucky charms.
It's so much perversion and things that happen, all these different chemical additives, the
processing of even creating this genetically modified weird corn in the first place.
But for us, and I grew up in a glorified food desert here in the United States, this was
just food.
I didn't know that it was bad for me.
It's just what we were exposed to and it's cheap.
It's very tasty as it's designed to be.
And for us, it's just food.
I didn't know that there was a difference between say, you know, a wild caught
salmon and fish sticks, you know, I didn't know that there was a difference.
And so I'm going to prefer the fish sticks with copious amounts of ketchup, by the way.
I'd love to bring Tim in here, both on specifically here, I guess we're
talking about these ultra processed foods and, you know, do they impact
metabolic health?
And then I think also interested in, you know, Sean's talking about quite a
number of different ways that might be affecting our metabolic health.
And I'm curious, like, as you're thinking about these, like, what are you most
worried about, you know, as people are thinking about this, what should they be
most worried about as they think about themselves and their children?
For 20 years, I was studying genetics and there's a lot of data showing that genes are
important in modifying our metabolic health and where we put the fat and the internal
fat and we've discussed this before.
So you know, I believe that it was genes were really important, but what's clear is the last 50 years where
levels of skyrocketed, our genes haven't changed at all.
So our genes were really well adapted for the environment our ancestors had.
And that meant we had the right energy control to get the right blood pressure,
to have the right amount of, you know, fat on our body, to be able to process foods correctly.
And now we're getting this onslaught of not only pollutants, but all these ultra processed
foods that make, that our genes really weren't geared up to deal with.
And also the abundance of food, the fact that there is
unlimited food which our ancestors never really had. So I think it's the inability to deal with
A, the abundance and the different types of food that are causing this problem. In most of the population, what's
interesting is that there do seem to be some people in all populations that are protected
against this. So even in the most obese countries, you'll find about 25% of the population that
can stay slim. And we don't really understand why that is but everyone else has ballooned over the last 50 years
So I think we have to really have a hard look at what we were hardwired for
our system and try and get back as close to that which means
Not only changing what we're eating, but also our patterns of eating, you know
So going from our current six episodes of eating every day back to perhaps what our ancestors were doing as two
large substantial meals and
Also our exercise patterns
Not being a sedentary better sleeping patterns all these things that would then get us back on the same
Wavelength as our genes have determined, you know for our energy to be stored on metabolism to be working maximally.
Do we understand how these ultra processed foods can end up damaging your metabolism? Because I think I'm listening to this story that says it's not as simple as just like you're eating too many calories. I think that was where you started, Sean, right? And there's all of this food that is just profoundly different from anything we had before. But do we understand at all how this works?
We know there are a number of potential mechanisms,
do disagree with you think, Sean,
but I don't think we know which ones of them
are the most important.
We really haven't done enough study on ultra-processed foods.
It's like being a taboo subject,
mainly because Big Food has managed to lobby government
to make sure that in the US and the UK, we're not doing enough research on this. It's like being a taboo subject, many because big food has managed to lobby government to
make sure that in the US and the UK, we're not doing enough research on this because
we can't touch cheap food.
That's for the masses.
That's political.
We can't go there.
But there are a number of possible mechanisms.
One is the speed of which you eat is much different with ultra-processed food.
So it might bypass some of these evolutionary mechanisms for feeling full.
So that's one that all our ancestors would have taken much longer to eat that food.
Therefore, feeling full, those signals would have come in, which they don't come now.
Then you've got the softness of the food, which means it's like baby food we're eating.
So your jaw doesn't get the same workout and there's evidence that the jaws of children now are receding.
If you've seen this that dentists are very worried that every 10 years our jaws are getting smaller because they're just not used to actually eating real food so you know.
That's crazy you're basically saying that they don't eat it's sort of like you're not working out your jaw muscle enough and your jaw is actually not growing.
Yeah, many people actually spend their whole life eating baby food now.
This is phenomenon is called vanishing caloric density. Right. So we have these foods like a cheeto, for example. And it's like so robust when you first bite into it, then it disappears. Right. And it gives us illusion of crunch and density. And so also we'll continue to eat a lot of it and overeat it.
And it's designed to be that way.
Because the way that we evolved, we have certain senses and receptors that are very sensitive
to flavor and like an overabundance of flavor.
And so it's them having the right, designing the right amount of intense flavor, but then to be able to back off with other compounds
and just put it at this right level.
And also if we're eating a quote real food, right?
There's a certain amount of chicken that you might eat.
And you're just like, I'm done with this chicken.
Like I can't eat another bite
or the same thing would hold true,
you know, with eating an avocado per se.
Like as we're eating a real food, our bodies start to rebel against it.
Like that's enough.
I've had enough.
It doesn't happen like that.
They the ad is literally, I bet you can't eat just one.
That's the Frito Lay mantra.
All right.
They're literally saying you can't just eat one of these chips.
You're going to eat the bag and you got to fight yourself to stop eating it.
It's designed to be that way.
It's brilliant, but it's also kind of like a doctor evil level of brilliance.
It's sort of terrifying, isn't it?
The way he describes it is like, we've carefully designed this so you're
going to be unable to stop eating it.
We're going to beat your genes.
Yeah.
All that evolution is worthless.
You're powerless in our control.
And of course the chemicals in these products themselves have your genes, yeah, all that evolution is worthless. You're powerless in our control.
And of course the chemicals in these products themselves
have effects on our body that again,
our genes and evolution haven't prepared us for.
So many of them are totally artificial
in that they come from like the petrol industry,
for most of the artificial sweeteners,
and they can disrupt the gut microbes,
and they produce chemicals that can themselves
cause diabetes in other animals
and send off anti-metabolic signals to the rest of the body.
So when you eat some of these junk foods
that Sean's talking about,
they regularly contain artificial sweeteners,
emulsifiers, preservatives,
and these are not things that our ancestors ever encountered or we have genes evolved
to.
So when they get down to the level of our gut microbes, who would normally be processing
them, they encounter them, they bash into them.
And when they see something like an artificial sweetener, they produce chemicals in response
to try and break it down. They can't break it down, but the chemicals they produce can go on and make you more like
to get diabetes.
They can send signals to the rest of the body saying there's something going on here.
I don't really understand it.
It's like an alert signal.
It forms inflammatory signals or it stimulates the immune system or it messes up the metabolic system. And that's what lots of basic research has shown.
And you get similar effects with emulsifiers,
which glue some of these products together,
these potato chips and things always contain these glues
to make it look like real food.
And when your microbes encounter them,
you get similar results.
They can clump together, so they don't work very them, you get similar results.
They can clump together so they don't work very well.
They get stuck together and these emulsifiers also affect the gut lining so that you get
leakiness of bacteria across into the blood and that can cause other metabolic disturbances.
So these are just a few of the possible ways in which, you know, our bad food environment is, is messing up
our energy management system, our metabolism, and that's why we're in this mess.
We talked about a number of different causes behind this metabolic disease. Do you think
that food is the number one or how do you think about that?
Yeah, I see it as definitely the number one obvious one that's really changed i think yes there are these pollutants and plastics but we don't yet know.
How much of a problem they are we know there are problems we don't know how big it is you know we should be very wary about it but i think we do know enough about ultra processed food now to know that is a definite real problem for everybody.
These other ones, we're just starting to get information on them.
I give you a very explicit reason why food is the number one is because all of our tissues
are made of food.
Every single one of the trillions of cells that I mentioned is literally made from the
food that we eat.
And so we're determining what we're making our tissues out of and also the energy that our bodies are running on
is made from the food that we're eating.
And so if we've got, you know,
our mutual friend, Will Bolswitz,
who he went to school for like forever, you know,
15 years or something to be a top tier gastroenterologist.
He was not taught that when he's looking at his patient's
gut health or looking at the stomach, the large intestine, the small intestine, that
all of those organs are made from the food that his patient has eaten.
The organs responsible for digestion, assimilation, and elimination are made from the food that
the people are eating itself.
Right?
Cardiology, same thing.
We've got these experts looking at the heart health and the cardiovascular health of their
patients.
I know the very best in the field.
These are my friends and colleagues.
They're not taught that when they're looking at their patient's heart or their arteries
or their veins, that they're looking at their patient's food that they've eaten, let alone what the blood is made of and the list goes on and on and on.
So that's why food is so powerful to affect change is because it's making all of the parts.
And so if we are going to improve our metabolic health, we've got to make our parts and our
energy out of the best things possible.
What do you say, Sean, to people that say, it's not about food, it's,
we can just tweak the mitochondria.
Mitochondria, Jonathan, are these little bits of the cell
that we call them the batteries of the cell.
And so all our cells have this little mitochondria
and they have their own set of genes and things.
And there are many people out there
who are selling products to enhance
your mitochondria. And if you just tweak those mitochondria just a little bit, give them
a little 5% more, we can reset everything. I'd be interested in your views on that rather
than this more holistic view that we've been talking about. Do you think there is a quick
fix through our mitochondria? I'm sure there are things that can affect the efficiency and health of the mitochondria at a
micro scale, but it is this whole system function. By the way, just to get some context with the
mitochondria, about 10% of our body's mass, about 10% of our weight is made of the mitochondria.
All right, we have a ton of mitochondria in our bodies.
And so there isn't one thing that's just going to fix all of that and make it run better.
And keeping that in mind, the mitochondria are really the end destination for certain
processes to take place, right?
The quote burning of fuel.
But even with that, even with that,
there are so many steps preceding that.
And there are so many steps after.
Because if we're just talking about in the context
of quote burning fat,
well, I was taught in school like policies, right?
Which is the freeing of the fat to be used as energy,
but it still has to make its way.
It still has to make its way to the mitochondria, right?
We're not just, again, we can't just address the mitochondria.
We've got to address all of the efficiency of this energy getting
released to even get there and to be used in the first place.
I'd love actually to talk about, you know, what can our listeners do?
And what are the actions?
And before we talk about food,
you actually wrote a bestselling book called Sleep Smarter.
Is there any role for sleep within improving this?
And maybe just help us say,
like if we were gonna try and run through now,
like what are the things you can really do?
What would you be saying to that?
Absolutely.
So sleep is another one of these epicaloric controllers
or epigenetic controllers.
And I think the best way to paint this picture is from scientists at the University of Chicago.
And they did a ward study, all right, in a controlled setting, crossover study, looking
at how does our sleep impact our metabolism?
All right.
And so they had test subjects to get an ample amount of sleep
for about two weeks.
So this was eight and a half hours of sleep,
but they put them on a calorie restricted diet.
All right.
Just to monitor weight loss and body fat loss as well.
And so, yeah, they collected all the data.
Another part of the study, again, it's a crossover study.
So they have a washout period.
Now they sleep deprived them.
They're on the same diet and different test subjects are doing different
things at different times. It's a controlled environment. They're eating the same amount
of food, same amount of calories, but now they sleep deprived them and they're only
getting five and a half hours of sleep. Collect all that data for about two weeks. After they
compile the data, when test subjects were well rested, they lost about 50% more body fat mass
doing the same exact thing. They're eating the same amount of calories, but
by getting more sleep, they lost more actual body fat. If we're looking
at this through the lens of metabolic health, the metabolic health was
improved when they were getting better sleep. Now here's a part of study that I
don't talk about a lot. Where is that energy coming improved when they were getting better sleep. Now here's a part of study that I don't talk about a lot.
Where is that energy coming from?
When they're losing weight,
where's that energy coming from?
When they were sleep deprived,
they were losing more muscle.
Upwards of 60% more of the weight loss,
because they were in the calorie restriction,
but they were losing more of their muscle tissue,
which is going to make you more
metabolically unhealthy long term.
Right.
So our sleep has a huge, huge impact on our metabolism and it might be the big outside
of the food itself that we're eating, the other major controller for us to pay attention
to.
And Sean, is there one thing that I could do to try and improve my metabolism that I
could start doing today?
There are dozens of things, of course,
but if I was to consolidate it down to,
I could do two really quick.
One, number one would be,
what is the biggest disruptor of our sleep today?
Factually, it is our technology.
So the number one thing in the environment
that I would recommend people to do,
we've got tons of data on this.
If you're on your screen right before bed,
that light that's shooting into your brain
is throwing off your circadian clock.
Your cell, every cell in your body is getting out of sorts
and just trying to figure out what time it is
because we evolved being connected to this 24 hour solar day.
And so we have this artificial daytime,
essentially when we're on our devices right before bed.
And it suppresses our melatonin and increases our cortisol.
So you could be physiologically, like you can be exhausted
and just pass out, but you're not
going to go through your sleep cycle efficiently.
So my recommendation, give yourself
a little bit of a tech curfew.
Now, again, I know that we're adults
and we don't like restriction.
Even the word curfew still brings up bad feelings for me.
But giving yourself a little bit of a screen curfew,
but here's the rub.
We cannot take away something that is so attractive for us
like our cell phone, right?
Like Instagram and all these things that are designed
to keep us hooked and entertained.
We've got to replace it with something
of equal or greater value.
That's the key.
And so what can you put in that place,
that 30 minutes or an hour,
if you want to get crazy off your technology,
you know, this, what is going to be unique to you.
So some people love to read, you know,
you can read a physical book, they still exist. You can listen to an audio book or podcast.
I'm guessing I can't just eat chocolate. That's not the right swap.
I mean, Chuck, Tim knows this as well as quality of the chocolate. Like there's some good chocolate
out there that can be.
It always tells me off for wanting to eat it at 11. So I like the idea that you're now
telling me that in order to put my phone away, I'm allowed to eat my chocolate. No chocolate on your pillow.
As a matter of fact, having a cup of maybe like some hot cocoa or cacao with some rishi
mushroom, which has been firm to improve our REM sleep, non REM sleep, overall sleep time,
that's a good idea.
And I've been known to do that a time or a time or two.
And because there's these precursors in
cacao and chocolate where it comes from, like tryptophan, you know, that that help
convert into melatonin down the road. So the screen curfew, fill that with something of greater or equal value time with your significant other maybe, you
know, maybe some intimate time, like fill it with something that feels good.
The second thing would be to control your environment that you're sleeping in and to
create a sleep sanctuary.
The human brain is always looking for automation.
If you're going into a room and you want to go to get some great sleep, but you're getting
into your bed and this is where you do a lot of your work, it's where you do a lot of your
scrolling, your brain is going to be looking for that behavior.
All right, so make your bedroom tech-free to the best of your ability and make sure
that you get some here.
We've got some blackout curtains around, but if you got external light pollution, some
researchers at Cornell University found that just even putting a light behind the test
subject's knee was enough to disrupt their sleep cycle.
All right, so our skin has photoreceptors as well. found that just even putting a light behind the test subjects knee was enough to disrupt their sleep cycle.
All right, so our skin has photoreceptors as well. So get the room nice and dark and cool.
And to the best of your ability, keep the technology out of out of your bedroom, make it a sleep sanctuary.
Thank you, Sean.
So Tim, what are the best foods to support our metabolic function? If you're going to give us a brief outline of someone what what
actual advice someone might be able to take.
We know that you need to avoid foods
that are really going to peak your blood sugar
and stress your insulin levels.
For many people, changing their breakfast,
so not having their normal morning cereal or granola,
not having their orange juice, which they would otherwise think is
healthy, cutting out some of those fruit smoothies that they've been told are super healthy.
So changing in a way what you believe is healthy food, and this is what people learn when they
would do the Zoey program, but I think cutting out those sugar spikes is probably the number
one thing for metabolic health if you had
a tip, which means that you should replace those generally with higher fat foods, good
quality fats obviously, and plants that have high fiber content so that you're dampening
down any sort of sugar spikes, particularly if you're prone to this or there's metabolic
diseases in the family.
And so Tim, what's your go-to breakfast?
My go-to breakfast is a full fat Greek yogurt mixed with milk kefir and with berries from
the freezer and I generally use the Zoe Daily 30 mix now on top of that to give me extra fiber and lots
of different plants.
Amazing.
I have so many more questions, but unfortunately I have hit time.
So I'm going to try and do a quick summary on what's quite a complicated topic.
And Sean and Tim, please keep me honest.
So the biggest thing I'm taking away is that like only 12% of Americans are metabolically
healthy and you're saying that that number is very similar if you're in the UK or Canada
or wherever.
And that's a problem because your metabolism is what's turning food into energy and if
it's not working well, actually the end result is either lots of very serious diseases, but
also weight gain and all the results that we see around us.
I think the other thing I take away is is the culprit seems to have changed a lot.
You both talked a lot about ultra-processed food, and I never heard anybody talk about ultra-processed food
when I first started Zuri with Tim eight years ago.
So that's a really profound change.
And Sean, you shared this amazing study where you were saying,
literally you had people eat exactly the same sandwich, right?
But one was a regular sandwich like my grandmother might have eaten.
And this other one is like this sort of artificial bread and this artificial cheese like substance.
And you're saying they actually found that your metabolism like slowed down by half with this ultra processed food.
So exactly the same number of calories.
It looks the same on the outside, but your body is responding really differently.
And I think it's another example about how, like just thinking about calories
clearly doesn't help us to understand what happens and how the food we're
eating is having this profound impact on us in a way that I think many of us
didn't realize.
Then I think we talked about ultra-processed food and the way that it affects us.
And, you know, one of the things you both talked about is the way that it's like baby
food.
So you like eat it and you don't even realize you're full and it gives you like this intense
flavor, but then it disappears.
You have to like keep taking one and these companies even proudly advertise the fact
that it like bypasses all your controls and you just can't stop.
So there's something quite wrong about that.
And then Tim, you explain that
for you, a lot of the reasons why you think now this ultra processed food is so harmful is the way
that it sort of messes up our microbiome. And I have to say, when you describe the food being full
of glue, I don't know about you, but I don't really like the idea that my food is full of glue.
It's definitely not like a big ingredient that they put on the front, but like these glues and
sweeteners are somehow affecting the microbiome and they can't cope with it. And then it's
sending these chemicals that are sort of messing up our microbiome. But then we did come to
some like really positive actionable advice. And I love the fact it's not just about food.
And so Sean, I think you said like sleeping better that these experiments that show that
like sleeping better can have a profoundly positive impact on your metabolism and you said if you're just
gonna pick two so you have a whole book I'm sure with many more clues and we'll
have a link to that in the show notes but if you want to think about two tech
curfew so get the screen turned off before you go to sleep but be honest no
one likes a curfew so you need to replace it with something better. So how do you find something else to do in the half
hour before you go to sleep that sort of unwinds? And I'm going to really think about that.
I think that's really interesting. I'm also going to make sure my wife listens to this
bit because we have a constant row about the fact that she brings her phone into the room
and she will never listen to me, but maybe she'll listen to you, Sean.
And the second one is sleep sanctuary.
So don't associate the place you go to sleep
with where you're working, like keep that separate,
otherwise your brain is sort of gonna start
immediately thinking about things,
which I love as an idea.
And then we came back to food.
And Tim, you said like your number one tip
for metabolic health actually is to avoid foods
that peak your blood sugar. That actually that sort of spike in blood sugar and collapse is the very
particular thing that you're concerned around metabolic health as that means you really want to
swap out foods that are leading to these really big blood sugar spikes and we talked about some
of those earlier in the conversation that actually just because they're brown doesn't mean that they
don't spike your blood sugar and that what many of us who are in their 40s or over were told about this food pyramid is full of foods that we're told are healthy.
But actually, you know, if you eat a lot of brown bread, you're going to have these big spikes.
So you just need to moderate that.
The biggest place to fix this is your breakfast, because many of us don't realize just how sort of bad our breakfasts are for us in terms of those blood sugar spikes.
And so if you want to be like Tim, then you want to have like much more high quality fat
rather than sort of this low quality carbohydrates.
And so you went full fat Greek yogurt and kefir and berries and daily 30 to add all
the sort of the right plants on top.
And that powers you for the through to lunchtime.
It's done pretty well so far.
Yep.
Brilliant.
Sean, thank you so much.
I can tell there's many other things we could have covered.
So I, I hope we can get you back in the future.
It would be an honor.
This has been awesome.
Thank you so much.
It's been so much fun.
Tim, thank you also.
Thank you.
Now, if you listen to the show regularly, you already believe that changing how you
eat can transform your health, but you can only do so much with general advice from a
weekly podcast.
If you want to feel much better now and be on the path to live many more healthy years,
you need something more.
And that's why more than 100,000 members trust Zoe each day to help them make the smartest
food choices. Combining our world-leading science with your Zoe test results,
Zoe is your daily companion to better health for life.
So how does it work?
Zoe membership starts with at-home testing
to understand your unique body.
Then Zoe's app is your health coach,
using weekly check-ins and daily guidance
to help you shift your food choices to steadily improve your health.
I rely on Zoe's advice every day, and truly it has transformed how I feel.
Will you give Zoe a try? The first step is easy. Take our free quiz to find out what
Zoe membership could do for you. Simply go to zoe.com slash podcast,
where as a podcast listener, you'll get 10% off.
As always, I'm your host, Jonathan Wolff.
Zoey's Science and Nutrition is produced by Julie Pinero, Sam Durham and Richard Willem.
The Zoey's Science and Nutrition podcast is not medical advice, and if you have any
medical concerns, please consult your doctor.
See you next time!