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Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Is it possible to stop eating Oreo cookies?

The manufacturers of Oreo are clear that they have to integrate sugar in the preparation of the cookies, because they know that then they will become addictive. Each cookie weighs 11 grams, 4 of which are sugar. Scientists who study addiction say that sugar needs six tenths of a second to stimulate the brain’s pleasure center from the time the sweetness touches the tip of the tongue until it reaches the brain. And that’s why it has such a great addictive capacity, because the time it takes to excite the brain is minimal. On the contrary, “it takes ten seconds for smoke to cross the nervous system of the throat and lungs to reach the brain”. Physicist and journalist Toni Pou explains it based, among other studies, on the book Hooked (2021), by Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Moss. Pou has written it in the current edition of the history magazine The World of Yesterdaydirected by the journalist Toni Soler, who has just published a volume dedicated entirely to sugar.

However, humans have not always eaten sugar as they do now. “Our ancestors ingested sugar in its original form, that is, in the form of fruit and other plant-based products”, which did not cause any alteration in the body because, “accompanied by fiber and the rest of components, the sugar was absorbed little by little”, says Pou, who adds that in the 1st century BC sugar had already been refined and later reached Europe that way.

The edition of the magazine dedicated to sugar

Beyond the nutritional and scientific story explained by the physicist, the magazine also deals with the product from different perspectives, which delve deeper into a product that has daily implications in our language (attribute the qualifier sweet to people or objects always has positive connotations). From the point of view of literature, journalist Valèria Gaillard focuses on the French writer Marcel Proust’s cupcake, the sweet that has become a symbol of memory, with different layers of meaning. What has transpired the most is that the cupcake refers “to the tenderness of childhood”. It also “has a sensual connotation, if we look at its rounded shape, which gives a lot of play to ambiguities”. The journalist’s writing in the magazine The World of Yesterday underlines that the episode of the cupcake is the best known in the history of literature, but little is known that the book in which it appears, In search of lost timeconsists of seven volumes and is about the story of a boy who wants to be a writer, but cannot find a way to fulfill his desire to write.

The edition of the magazine dedicated to sugar is completed with many other interesting reports, such as that of journalists Marc Casanovas, Paula Molés and Carme Gasull. And, at the end, it ends with photographs of a dessert by pastry chef Jordi Roca, from Celler de Can Roca, entitled “And for dessert, a book” and which describes the step-by-step invention of a Sweet with a taste for books. He explained it on his Instagram account.

Toni Soler: “I’m looking for the cream that resembles the one my mother used to make”

Toni Soler, director of the magazine, likes sweet food more than when he was young, but at the same time he likes foods with strong, spicy, salty tastes. “Before it was brie cheese and now I’m gorgonzola”, he says. And he adds more examples: “I used to drink whiskey masked with Coca-Cola and now I drink it alone”.

The journalist Toni Soler

Regarding sugar, the journalist also confesses that he prefers to end meals with dessert. And, of all, the favorite is cream. “The cream drives me crazy, I ask for it everywhere and make an inventory, because I’m looking for the one that most resembles the one my mother used to make”, which was very fine and elegant. However, the journalist maintains that it is difficult for him to find good ones in restaurants: when he does, he would drink a whole liter. And a recommendation for surfers in creams: “La Fageda is very good to be packaged”.

“The magazine ‘El Món d’Ahir’ aims to make a modest contribution to history”

Journalist Toni Soler began publishing The World of Yesterday five years ago now. “It was a year when I wasn’t doing TV, I had time and I had always been attracted to the idea of ​​publishing a magazine like the Jotdownfor example”, he explains one morning at breakfast time (sweet, yes). Five years later, the paper magazine in Catalan on history has a stable community of subscribers (1,200) and an agreement with Abacus for distribution. “The difference with other history magazines is that we put the emphasis on narrative history, on the texts, which we take great care of, that go through the careful editing of Pere Farré, Laura Gas and Manel Lucas”. In other words, “it is a magazine to be enjoyed as reading, which is why we prefer to commission articles from journalists who write well and not so much from reputable scholars”. Why? Because “sometimes the journalist approaches the subject from an ignorance that is the same as that of the reader and the research process will be done at the same time”, says Soler. And he mentions the article written by the journalist Albert Om about the biography of the Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa, published in the edition before that of Sucre.

Currently, the magazine publishes monographs in which, in a multifaceted and transversal way, a topic is explored in depth, but “it has been a natural evolution of the magazine” because it was not like this from the very beginning. After sugar, the next topic will be “the future”, about the history of the future. “We will analyze how humans have thought about the concept of the future, because now we talk a lot about the future, but in the 13th century they also talked about it”. So much so, that thinking about the future makes us human “and at the same time connects us with humans from other times”, he concludes.

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