The Sourdough School

BREAD COURSES || NUTRITION TRAINING || DIGESTION ANALYSIS || PERSONALISED BREAD

Learn to bake, eat, and share the healthiest bread in the world. Discover how to bake as Lifestyle Medicine from the walled gardens of Dr Vanessa Kimbell’s beautiful Victorian home in rural Northamptonshire in the UK, where we train healthcare professionals, teach bakers, and support individuals to bake personalised bread using nutrigenetics and gut health assessments.

+44(0)7813308301
[email protected]
Follow on Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Student Login

Book a consultation

Navigation
  • courses
    • Book a Call
    • 12 week Bread Delivery Gut Reset Course
    • 1 Day Practitioner BALM Training Day
    • 3 Day Bake for Heath Workshops
    • 6 Day Reset Retreat
    • Annual Tuscan Retreat
    • The Diploma
  • Personalisation
    • Bread & Health Assessments
    • Personalising Bread
    • Personalising Bread Using Nutrigenetics
    • Priority Access: Join the Waiting List
  • About
    • About The Sourdough School
    • Contact Us & FAQ
    • General FAQ’s about The School
    • Request a Callback
    • Where to stay & more
    • Reviews
    • The Team
    • A Social Enterprise
    • Contributors & Guest Tutors
    • What Our Students Say
    • Login
  • Our Approach
    • Baking as Lifestyle Medicine (BALM)
    • Prove it – The Case Studies
    • 12 Week Student Support Pack
    • Bread as Preventative Health
    • Training Bakers & Healthcare Professionals
    • Diversity Bread™
    • BALM & Bread in The Blue Zone
    • Proven: Bread Podcast
  • Admissions
    • Request a callback
  • Shop
    • Our Flour and Ingredients
    • Our Books
    • Equipment
    • Flours From Farmers Directory
    • Add Farmer to the Directory

Ultra-Processed Diets Cause Excess Calorie Intake and Weight Gain: An Inpatient Randomized Controlled Trial of Ad Libitum Food Intake

[1028]
Lorna PapeUltra-Processed Diets Cause Excess Calorie Intake and Weight Gain: An Inpatient Randomized Controlled Trial of Ad Libitum Food IntakeKevin D. Hall, Alexis Ayuketah, Robert Brychta, Peter J Walter, Shanna Yang, Megan Zhou15 May 2019https://www.cell.com/cell-metabolism/fulltext/S1550-4131(19)30248-7

Increased availability and consumption of ultra-processed foods (‘UPF’) have been associated with rising obesity prevalence, but scientists have not yet demonstrated that UPF causes obesity or adverse health outcomes. Researchers at the NIH investigated whether people ate more calories when exposed to a diet composed of UPF compared with a diet composed of unprocessed foods.

1 How to Bake, Eat & Share Bread according to the 6 pillars of Lifestyle Medicine Principles1. Nutrition & Healthy Eating Principles -, 5. Understanding & avoiding refined flour & UPFAmaranthImpact on Weight Managementhttps://thesourdoughschool.com/the-classic-10-minute-einkorn-sourdough-tin-loaf/https://thesourdoughschool.com/the-classic-10-minute-einkorn-sourdough-tin-loaf/

Researchers found that although the meals were matched for nutritional content across the UPF and unprocessed diet, participants ate more calories, and gained weight whilst eating the UPF diet, but lost weight when eating the diet composed of unprocessed foods.  Other interesting points from the study were that the meal eating rate was significantly greater in with the UPF diet, and there was also a decrease in the hunger hormone ghrelin, and an increase in the appetite suppressing hormone PYY when eating the unprocessed diet. 

This was a small study, and participants were assisted by having food prepared for them, which would undoubtedly have helped them to maintain the unprocessed diet.  However, it also demonstrates the importance of limiting UPF in the diet, and these were clearly shown to cause weight gain.  The information on the hormonal changes from the unprocessed diet is also interesting, and is potentially another reason why eating such a diet is also likely to be helpful for weight management.  

[993]

The references to the decreased hunger hormones / observation that volunteers eating the UPF diet in the previous study had a much higher meal eating rate, also made me think of this study, which I also found interesting:

https://www.sourdough.co.uk/research/acute-impact-intake-four-types-bread-satiety-blood-concentrations-glucose-insulin-free-fatty-acids-triglyceride-acylated-ghrelin-randomized-controlled-cross-t/

Since median ghrelin AUC was significantly lower and satiety levels were higher when eating Einkorn sourdough, it would seem that replacing an UPF commercial bread with an unprocessed Einkorn sourdough loaf could be a good way to help avoid unnecessary calorie intake and weight gain.  

Existing Member Login

All reasonable care is taken when advising about health aspects of bread, but the information that we share is not intended to take the place of treatment by a qualified medical practitioner. You must seek professional advice if you are in any doubt about any medical condition. Any application of the ideas and information contained on this website is at the reader's sole discretion and risk.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Email Sign Up

BANT Member
Lifecode GX

Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2025 Vanessa Kimbell
Call +44 (0)7813308301 | Email [email protected]
Registered in England & Wales: 08412236
Website by Callia Web