Why do we eat dessert?
from Swaus01@piefed.social to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 17 Mar 22:32
https://piefed.social/c/nostupidquestions/p/1888698/why-do-we-eat-dessert

Why eat a sugary meal right before going to bed?

  1. Food high in sugar is nutritionally good for short burst energy, and if not used up, that energy is stored as fat. Since people generally go to sleep after meals are they not wasting this potential short-release energy yield?

  2. Let’s consider instead that we eat dessert specifically to put on fat. Well, this may have been desirable as an outcome historically, but for a long time - maybe 200 years or so - humans have NOT wanted to build fat. Also - it doesn’t work. We burn fat during sleep, so those ‘dessert gains’ disappear.

  3. Now let us visit the simplest answer of “it tastes good” - well in that case, why do we eat dessert when we do? We could eat sugary snack at any point of the day - a dessert-lunch might make a lot of sense! So let me repeat myself:

Why eat a sugary meal right before going to bed?

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

Gold_E_Lox@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 17 Mar 22:34 next collapse

yummy

Swaus01@piefed.social on 17 Mar 22:36 collapse

Then perish.

BassTurd@lemmy.world on 17 Mar 23:37 next collapse

We’re all dying. Might as well enjoy the ride.

PunnyName@lemmy.world on 18 Mar 00:27 collapse

Gonna happen anyway.

TheAlbatross@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 17 Mar 22:39 next collapse

I think it’s more cultural as it’s not uniform globally. I don’t care much for dessert as a concept, but I love a piece of cold fruit, like an orange, strawberry or melon after dinner. I find it helps reset the mouth after a flavorful meal. And I’ll usually have a cup of tea with it.

Desserts seem to pair better with coffee or tea, and having those after a meal is a fairly common ritual. I wonder if we have dessert after dinner because we often have coffee or tea?

OriginEnergySux@lemmy.world on 17 Mar 22:44 next collapse

After a long hard day working at a shitty corporation, a yummy dinner isnt enough. I like that little extra yum yum before bed (like dark chocolate or semolina pudding with honey) coz it makes me feel happy. I like my vices, even though i know they are bad so i try to not go overboard

Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world on 17 Mar 22:45 next collapse

I LOVE dessert foods, but I’m not a fan of dessert after a meal. Most meals I experience are over portioned as it is, there’s no need to add the least nutritional thing on top of it. To me it just seems like “let’s take the most enjoyable foods and eat them at the least enjoyable time.”

If we are having dessert at my house, which is typically reserved for special occasions, it is almost always an hour or so after we eat the meal.

RegularJoe@lemmy.world on 17 Mar 22:46 next collapse

It starts with libations and food offerings.

Sweets were fed to the gods in ancient Mesopotamia and ancient India[7] and other ancient civilizations.[8] Herodotus mentions that Persian meals featured many desserts, and were more varied in their sweet offerings than the main dishes

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dessert#History

The Romans continued the practice.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Roman_cuisine#Desse…

back to the main dessert article:

Europeans began to manufacture sugar in the Middle Ages, and more sweet desserts became available.[14] Even then sugar was so expensive usually only the wealthy could indulge on special occasions. The first apple pie recipe was published in 1381;[15] The earliest documentation of the term cupcake was in “Seventy-five Receipts for Pastry, Cakes, and Sweetmeats” in 1828 in Eliza Leslie’s Receipts cookbook.[16]

And then there’s this guy:

Evidence for the domestication of the cacao tree exists as early as 5300 BP in South America, in present-day southeast Ecuador by the Mayo-Chinchipe culture, before it was introduced to Mesoamerica.[8] It is unknown when chocolate was first consumed as opposed to other cacao-based drinks, and there is evidence the Olmecs, the earliest known major Mesoamerican civilization, fermented the sweet pulp surrounding the cacao beans into an alcoholic beverage.[9][10]

Chocolate was extremely important to several Mesoamerican societies,[11] and cacao was considered a gift from the gods by the Mayans and the Aztecs.[12][13]

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chocolate#History

<img alt="Spongebob selling chocolates" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/40c3022f-15a0-4618-be40-e1274738b115.jpeg">

Now as to “why before bed”? It’s become a practice. But here’s the thing: nobody is making you eat a sweet nor at a particular time of day.

In the 80s it was rare to see people drinking water, except for “health food nuts”. It was far more common to see soft drinks/sodas. Over the years, society has become more accepting of drinking water. You didn’t have “hydrohomies” in the 80s. Be the change you want to see in the world.

radix@lemmy.world on 17 Mar 23:00 next collapse

If food were just about cold, hard, logical choices based on nutrition alone, we’d all just eat Soylent Red and Yellow.

People trade long-term detriment for short-term enjoyment all the time.

PunnyName@lemmy.world on 18 Mar 00:28 next collapse

Not everyone eats sugary meals before bed. Likely a very rare thing, and also bad for your health.

ada@piefed.blahaj.zone on 18 Mar 00:55 next collapse

Your first two options contradict each other

1) It adds fat 2) It doesn’t add fat, because your body burns up fat when you sleep

geekwithsoul@piefed.social on 18 Mar 01:59 collapse

Part of it is that eating something sweet can relax the muscles around the stomach. So after a full meal, in addition to the attraction of eating something sweet in general, it makes you feel less stuffed.