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Organic Pumpkin Seed Oil Lightly Toasted - Sun & Seed - 250ml
Organic Pumpkin Seed Oil Lightly Toasted - Sun & Seed - 250ml
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Although we make every effort to ensure product information is correct and accurate, it may still happen that the manufacturers may change production practices without our knowledge and ingredients, allergens, dietary and nutritional content may differ from those on the packaging. Before consuming always read the product's actual label on the package when you receive it and refer to the manufacturers most current information.

Recipes with Organic Pumpkin Seed Oil Lightly Toasted - Sun & Seed - 250ml
Chickpea & Pea Salad with Hibiscus Yogurt Dressing
Chickpea & Pea Salad with Hibiscus Yogurt Dressing

A vibrant spring-summer salad that combines protein-rich chickpeas and sweet green peas with cucumber and pomegranate. Fresh mint and parsley to brighten every bite, while a tangy-floral hibiscus dressing — balanced with honey, lemon, and extra virgin olive oil — pulls it all together. Light, colourful, and ready in minutes.

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Oat Groat Mediterranean Salad
Oat Groat Mediterranean Salad

Forget the supermarket pasta salads that leave you reaching for the biscuit tin by 2 PM. This is built on Oat Groats— the most unrefined version of the grain available. Groats keep their fibre matrix entirely intact, providing a slow-release energy source. Paired with vibrant Mediterranean vegetables, it's "Real Food" that requires proper chewing and delivers proper satisfaction. No industrial fillers—just a hearty, nutrient-dense bowl that keeps you fuelled.

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Wild Rice & Crayfish Salad
Wild Rice & Crayfish Salad

Swap the supermarket "meal-deal" pasta for something that is better for you. Our Wild Rice & Crayfish Salad is a great in texture, built on a foundation of unrefined wild rice—a whole food "super-grain" that provides a slow-release fibre matrix a processed cracker could only dream of.

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Asparagus and strawberry rye grain salad
Asparagus and strawberry rye grain salad

Healthy whole meal salad - rich in protein and fibre. A proper celebration of the British seasons, this Asparagus and Strawberry Rye Grain Salad is a bit of a curveball that works brilliantly. It brings together the snap of spring asparagus, the sun-drenched sweetness of strawberries, and the satisfying, nutty chew of rye grains. Vibrant, sophisticated, and unexpectedly refreshing, it’s the ultimate "posh lunch" or a stunning side for your next garden gathering.

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Citrus spinach salad with pecans
Citrus spinach salad with pecans

Healthy and tasty salad with winter citrus fruit will make a great option for lunch.

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Tabbouleh with pomegranate
Tabbouleh with pomegranate

Zingy and fresh Lebanese salad - made with bulgur and pomegranate. This Tabbouleh is built on unrefined bulgur wheat—a structural grain with an intact fibre matrix that keeps your blood sugar steady.Topped with pomegranate seeds for a burst of bioavailable nutrients and real sensory texture. This is how real food should taste.

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Articles that mention Organic Pumpkin Seed Oil Lightly Toasted - Sun & Seed - 250ml
Olive oil - all you need to know
Olive oil - all you need to knowBy Agi Kaja - 18/08/2022

Where is olive oil from? Liquid gold - that's what Homer used to call olive oil in Ancient Greece. Olive oil has always been the most important ingredient of a healthy Mediterranean diet. Olive trees have grown for thousands of years around the Mediterranean Sea in Greece, Italy, Spain and Portugal. With hot and dry summers, the local climate of these countries is perfect for these resilient trees. Today, Greece is the biggest consumer of olive oil per capita (20l annually), following Italy (13l). Spain is the biggest producer of olive oil. However, Greece and Portugal produce olive oil of the best quality - the premium extra virgin olive oil with a rich, fruity aroma and less acidic flavour. How is olive oil made? Made from the fruits of the olive tree, olive oil is technically a juice. Harvesting takes place once a year, early in autumn, when the olives are fresh and at their best quality with low acidity levels. Then they are the most nutritious and contain the most antioxidants. The olives are crushed just like any other fruits. Olive oil, just like any juice, is best when it's cold pressed and fresh, and this is what we call extra virgin. What is extra virgin olive oil? Extra virgin olive oil is purely extracted from cold-pressed olives, and it's not blended with other oils. Non-extra virgin olive oil may include both cold-pressed and processed oils. Extra virgin olive oil means there were no chemicals used in the process of extracting the oil. When oil is cold-pressed, it means it was not heated over 27 °C during the production. This kind of olive oil contains more nutrients and vitamins. Why is extra virgin oil healthy? In recent years, the popularity of olive oil as a healthy ingredient has been growing, and many families around the world have a bottle of it in a kitchen cupboard. The fatty acid (oleic acid) in olive oil is mainly monounsaturated fat (73% while14% of the oil is saturated fat, and 11% is polyunsaturated). Olive oil contains omega-6, omega-3 fatty acids, vitamins E and K and lots of antioxidants which protect our cells from free radicals. The oleic acid can help reduce inflammation and have great effects on genes linked to cancer, minimising the risk of chronic diseases such as heart disease. Consuming olive oil is also not linked to weight gain. How to cook with olive oil? Although you can use it in many healthy recipes, including for sauténing and frying, olive oil loses some of its beneficial properties when cooked or warmed up. The best is to use olive oil for uncooked recipes such as salads, dressings and dips or just drizzle it on top of all kinds of dishes for a finishing touch. You can now buy Greek extra virgin olive oil at Wholefood Earth and enjoy the goodness of this liquid gold. Browse our collection of healthy oils! From hemp seed oil and flax seed oil to organic coconut oil, you will find a perfect option for your cooking and baking.

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A Guide to Honey: Manuka, Floral Varieties and How to Choose
A Guide to Honey: Manuka, Floral Varieties and How to ChooseBy Agi Kaja - 09/07/2026

Honey is one of the oldest foods we know, and it is also one of the most varied. Open a few jars side by side and you will find colours ranging from pale gold to deep amber, and flavours that shift from delicate and floral to rich and almost treacle-like. That variety is no accident. Every honey carries the character of the flowers the bees visited to make it, which is why no two types taste quite the same. Here is a friendly guide to the main kinds of honey, what makes Manuka so special, and how to pick the right jar for you. Why honey tastes so different The flavour, colour and texture of any honey come down to one thing: the flowers. Bees gather nectar from whatever is blooming nearby, and the type of blossom shapes the finished honey. As a rule, the paler the honey, the milder and more delicate the taste, while darker honeys tend to be stronger and more robust. The season, the region and even the weather all play a part, which is what makes honey such a fascinating natural product. Honey generally falls into two broad camps. Blossom honey, sometimes called multifloral, is made from the nectar of many different flowers and offers a rounded, classic honey flavour. Single-flower honey, known as monofloral, comes mostly from one type of blossom and has a more distinctive character all of its own. Popular floral honeys Some of the best-loved honeys are named after the flower that defines them. Acacia honey is very pale and mild, with a light, almost syrupy sweetness that makes it a favourite for drizzling and for sweetening drinks without overpowering them. Orange blossom honey carries a gentle citrus note and a fragrant aroma. Wildflower honey, gathered from a mix of meadow blooms, changes with the seasons and gives you a true taste of the local landscape. At the deeper end of the scale, heather honey is thick, amber and full-bodied, with a bold flavour that stands up well on toast or alongside cheese. Chestnut honey is darker still, with a rich, slightly bitter edge that many people come to love. Part of the joy of honey is exploring these differences and finding the ones you keep coming back to. What makes Manuka honey special No honey has captured attention quite like Manuka. It comes from the nectar of the Manuka bush, which grows in New Zealand, and it has a thick texture and a distinctive, earthy flavour that sets it apart from lighter floral honeys. Manuka's real claim to fame is a natural compound called methylglyoxal, or MGO for short. You will see MGO ratings printed on the jar, and the higher the number, the greater the concentration of this compound. A honey labelled MGO 100+ is milder, while higher ratings such as 250+ are prized and priced accordingly. You may also see the letters UMF, which stands for Unique Manuka Factor, another grading system used to show quality and authenticity. Because genuine Manuka is highly sought after, it pays to buy from a trusted source and to look for a clear MGO or UMF rating on the label. If you would like to explore it, our range includes options from everyday Manuka honey at MGO 40 up to a stronger Manuka honey at MGO 250+, so you can start gently or go for a more intense jar. Raw, set and runny honey Beyond the flower, you will also see honey described by how it has been processed and how it looks. Raw honey is minimally filtered and not heated to high temperatures, so it keeps more of its natural character. Runny honey is smooth and pourable, perfect for drizzling, while set or crystallised honey has a thick, spreadable texture that many people love on toast. Crystallisation is completely natural and is not a sign that anything is wrong. A gentle warm-water bath will loosen a set honey again if you prefer it runny. Choosing the right honey for you The best honey is really a matter of taste and how you plan to use it. For sweetening tea or drizzling over yoghurt and porridge, a mild, pale honey such as acacia or a light blossom honey works beautifully. For baking and cooking, a good all-rounder blossom honey does the job without costing a fortune. If you enjoy a bold flavour on toast or with cheese, reach for a darker honey like heather. And if you are curious about Manuka, start with a lower MGO rating and work your way up. One thing to keep in mind: honey is a natural sugar, so it is best enjoyed in moderation as part of a balanced diet. It should also never be given to babies under one year old. A jar worth savouring From the palest acacia to the boldest Manuka, honey is a reminder of just how much variety nature packs into a single ingredient. Every jar tells the story of a particular place, season and set of flowers. Try a few, notice how different they taste, and you will soon discover which honeys deserve a permanent spot in your cupboard.

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Why Raw Organic Virgin Coconut Oil Deserves a Spot in Your Kitchen
Why Raw Organic Virgin Coconut Oil Deserves a Spot in Your KitchenBy Agi Kaja - 06/07/2026

Some ingredients earn their keep quietly, and raw organic virgin coconut oil is one of them. It sits in the cupboard looking unassuming, then turns out to be one of the most useful things you own. You can fry with it, bake with it, stir it into a morning coffee, or rub it into dry skin at the end of the day. Few pantry staples work that hard. If you have been curious about the fuss, or you already keep a jar on the shelf and want to get more from it, here is a closer look at what makes this oil worth the space. What "raw", "organic" and "virgin" actually mean These words get printed on a lot of labels, so it helps to know what they are telling you. Virgin coconut oil is pressed from fresh coconut flesh rather than dried copra, and it keeps far more of the coconut's natural aroma and flavour. Raw means the oil has not been heated to high temperatures during production, which protects the delicate compounds that gentle processing preserves. Organic tells you the coconuts were grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilisers. Put those together and you get a cold-pressed, unrefined coconut oil that tastes and smells like the fruit it came from. Refined coconut oil, by contrast, is often bleached and deodorised, which strips out most of the character. Once you have cooked with the real thing, the difference is hard to miss. The benefits worth knowing about Coconut oil is roughly 90 percent saturated fat, but not all saturated fats behave the same way. A large share of the fat in coconut oil comes from medium-chain triglycerides, or MCTs, which the body handles differently from the longer-chain fats found in many other foods. This is one reason coconut oil has become popular with people following keto and low-carb diets. Because it is so stable, virgin coconut oil also resists going rancid, so a jar keeps well in the cupboard without any fuss. That stability is part of why it performs so well as a cooking fat. A quick note on health claims. Coconut oil is a rich source of saturated fat, so it is best enjoyed as part of a varied, balanced diet rather than in large quantities. Government guidance still recommends keeping total saturated fat within sensible limits. Treat it as a flavourful, versatile fat to use thoughtfully, not a cure-all. Cooking and baking with coconut oil This is where a good jar really shines. Coconut oil stays stable at the temperatures used for shallow frying and roasting, which makes it a reliable choice for everyday cooking. Use it to sauté vegetables, sear tofu, or bring a subtle sweetness to a curry. In baking, it works beautifully as a dairy-free swap for butter. Melt it and use it in flapjacks, brownies and banana bread, or rub it into a crumble topping. It also makes a lovely base for homemade granola, helping oats and nuts crisp up in the oven. For a fast energy boost, stir a spoonful into coffee or a smoothie. Blended in, it gives drinks a smooth, slightly creamy finish. More than a cooking fat Plenty of people keep a second jar in the bathroom, and for good reason. Raw organic virgin coconut oil doubles as a simple, single-ingredient skin and hair treatment. Smoothed onto skin, it works as a natural moisturiser for dry patches, elbows and heels. Warmed between your palms and worked through the ends of your hair, it makes a nourishing pre-wash mask. Some people use it as a gentle makeup remover or a base for homemade scrubs and balms. Because there is nothing in the jar but coconut, you always know exactly what you are putting on your skin. How to choose a good one Not every jar on the shelf is the same, so it pays to read the label. Look for oil that is raw, cold-pressed, unrefined and certified organic, with coconut as the only ingredient. Good virgin coconut oil is solid and creamy white at cool room temperature and turns clear and liquid once it warms above about 24 degrees. Both states are completely normal, so there is no need to worry if your jar changes with the seasons. Our Raw Organic Virgin Coconut Oil from RAWGORILLA ticks all of those boxes. It is cold-pressed the traditional way from fresh organic coconut flesh, with no refining and nothing added, so you get the pure flavour and aroma of the coconut in every spoonful. A small jar that earns its place The best kitchen staples are the ones you reach for again and again without thinking about it. Raw organic virgin coconut oil is exactly that kind of ingredient. It cooks, it bakes, it blends and it nourishes, all from a single jar of one simple thing. Once it becomes part of your routine, you will wonder how the cupboard ever managed without it. Ready to give it a go? Explore our range of raw organic virgin coconut oil and find the jar that suits your kitchen.

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Plant Protein Powders for Bakeries, Cafes and Food Producers
Plant Protein Powders for Bakeries, Cafes and Food ProducersBy Agi Kaja - 23/06/2026

High-protein has moved from the gym bag to the menu board. Customers want protein in their muffins, their morning oats, their grab-and-go bars, and they want it without dairy. If you run a bakery, a cafe, or a food production line, a good plant protein powder is a simple way to add that without reworking your whole recipe book. Here are five single-ingredient, organic powders, what each one does in real food, and how to buy them in volume. What to look for in a baking protein Three things matter once you start cooking with protein powder rather than just shaking it in water. Density tells you how much actual protein you are adding per gram, which matters when you are making a nutrition claim on a label. Flavour decides whether the powder disappears into the recipe or takes it over. And behaviour in the bowl matters most of all, because protein powder absorbs liquid and changes texture, so you usually swap it in for a portion of the flour rather than adding it on top. A safe starting point is to replace 10 to 20 percent of the flour by weight, then add a little extra liquid or fat to keep the crumb soft. Test, taste, adjust. 1. Organic Pea Protein, 85 percent The workhorse for food production. At 85 percent protein it lets you make a strong nutrition claim with the smallest amount of powder, and its neutral, slightly earthy flavour blends into both sweet and savoury formulas. It is the natural base for high-protein breads, bars and even plant-based meat alternatives. Because it is so concentrated, go gently on the substitution rate and watch your hydration, as it will dry a mix out faster than the lower-density seed proteins. 2. Organic Rice Protein, 80 percent Smooth, fine and mildly sweet, brown rice protein has a soft texture that suits lighter, fruitier bakes and works well in cafe smoothies and overnight oats. On its own it is a little low in lysine, but paired with pea protein it gives a complete amino acid profile, which is the trick for vegan products that need to stand up nutritionally. Easy to digest, which is a selling point worth putting on the menu. 3. Organic Pumpkin Seed Protein, 60 percent This one brings character. Cold milled from pumpkin seeds, it has a deep, nutty flavour that shines in darker, heartier products, think seeded loaves, savoury muffins, chocolate or banana bakes, and energy balls. It also carries natural iron, magnesium and zinc, so it adds genuine nutritional depth you can talk about, not just a protein number. 4. Organic Hemp Seed Protein, 50 percent A complete protein in a single ingredient, with all nine essential amino acids, plus fibre and plant-based omega-3 and omega-6. The earthy, nutty taste is made for rustic, wholesome ranges, wholegrain loaves, flapjacks, oat bakes. Lower density than the isolates, so it is more of a wholefood addition than a pure protein hit, which suits a craft or artisan positioning. 5. Organic Sunflower Seed Protein, 50 percent The allergen-friendly all-rounder. Free from nuts, soya, dairy and gluten, it is the safe choice for schools, nurseries, and any venue catering to allergies. The mild, smooth flavour blends into almost anything, from breads and flapjacks to protein bars, which makes it the most flexible powder here for a broad menu. The formulator's trick: pea plus rice Pea protein is high in lysine but lower in methionine. Brown rice protein is the reverse. Combine them, roughly two parts pea to one part rice, and you get a complete amino acid profile comparable to whey. For any vegan product where you want to claim quality protein, this blend is the industry-standard answer. Menu and product ideas For cafes: protein-boosted overnight oats and porridge, smoothies and shakes, energy balls and protein bites by the till, and a higher-protein muffin or banana bread in the cabinet. For bakeries: seeded protein loaves, flapjacks, protein cookies and bars. For producers: high-protein snack formulations, breakfast products, and plant-based meat alternatives where pea protein does the heavy lifting. Buying in bulk All five are available from 250g pouches for recipe testing right up to bulk sacks for production, so you can trial a product before you commit to volume. Bulk pricing as a guide: Pea and Rice protein in 20kg sacks from around £305 to £317, and Pumpkin, Hemp and Sunflower in 25kg sacks from around £359 to £415. That works out to a low cost per gram of protein, especially for the high-density pea and rice options. Get in touch for trade and wholesale enquiries. Whether you want maximum protein with a neutral taste (pea), a soft texture for lighter bakes (rice), a nutty mineral boost (pumpkin), a wholefood complete protein (hemp), or an allergen-free all-rounder (sunflower), there is a powder here to build a menu around. All five are certified organic and single ingredient, which keeps your own ingredient list clean and your story simple. Always test recipes at scale and check each product's specification and allergen information before using it in commercial production.

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Fish-Free Brain Food: 5 Easy Ways to Sneak Omega-3s into Your Kids' Meals
Fish-Free Brain Food: 5 Easy Ways to Sneak Omega-3s into Your Kids' MealsBy Agi Kaja - 25/05/2026

Omega-3 essential fatty acids are the building blocks for brain development of kids, helping with everything from concentration in the classroom to regulating mood and sleep. But knowing they need it and actually getting them to eat it are two completely different battles. If your child turns their nose up at a piece of salmon, gags at the thought of fish oil supplements, or if your family is following a plant-based diet, you might be wondering how to hit those nutritional targets. Thankfully, plant-based Omega-3 sources like chia seeds, hemp hearts, and milled flaxseeds (linseeds) are incredibly versatile. Because they have a very mild, nutty flavour, they are the ultimate "stealth nutrition." Here are five stress-free ways to sneak brain-boosting Omega-3s into your kids' meals without them ever noticing. 1. The Smoothie Disguise Texture is often the biggest hurdle for fussy eaters. Whole chia seeds left in liquid can develop a gel-like texture that kids immediately detect. The solution? The blender. How to do it: Throw a tablespoon of chia seeds or shelled hemp hearts into your usual fruit smoothie before blending. Why it works: High-speed blending completely pulverises the seeds, eliminating any strange textures. Paired with sweet ingredients like bananas, frozen berries, and a splash of milk or apple juice, the seeds become completely undetectable. 2. Baking the Goodness In If your children love a sweet treat, use baking to your advantage. Milled flaxseed works beautifully as a partial flour substitute or an egg replacement in classic British bakes. How to do it: Swap out two tablespoons of flour for two tablespoons of milled flaxseed in your next batch of pancakes, muffins, or weekend flapjacks. Why it works: Milled flaxseed has a slightly sweet, nutty profile that blends perfectly with oats and flour. Just remember to use milled flaxseed rather than whole, as whole seeds will pass straight through their digestive system without releasing those valuable Omega-3s. 3. The Pasta Sauce Trick Spaghetti Bolognese or a simple tomato pasta bake is a staple in most UK households. It is also the perfect hiding place for extra nutrients. How to do it: Stir a tablespoon of chia seeds or milled flaxseed directly into a simmering tomato pasta sauce just before serving. Why it works: Chia seeds absorb liquid, so they actually act as a brilliant natural thickener for watery sauces. In a rich red sauce, the tiny seeds just look like small flecks of herbs or black pepper. 4. The Porridge Power-Up Starting the day with a bowl of porridge or Weetabix is a fantastic way to warm up before the school run, and it provides an incredibly easy canvas for Omega-3s. How to do it: Mix half a tablespoon of chia seeds or milled flaxseed into the dry oats before adding milk and microwaving. Top with honey or fruit as usual. Why it works: Cooking the seeds into the oats allows them to blend into the overall texture of the porridge. The extra boost of fibre will also help keep their tummies full until lunchtime, preventing the dreaded mid-morning sugar crash. 5. Upgraded Breadcrumb Coatings If homemade chicken nuggets or fish-free fingers are on the dinner menu, you can easily upgrade the crispy coating. How to do it: Mix a generous spoonful of milled flaxseed or hemp hearts into your standard breadcrumb or Panko mix before coating your chicken, tofu, or vegetables. Why it works: The seeds toast up beautifully in the oven or air fryer, adding an extra layer of crunch to the coating. Your kids will just think they are getting an extra-crispy dinner. By keeping a bag of chia or milled flaxseed in the cupboard and adding just a spoonful to their favourite meals, you can effortlessly support their growing minds and bodies.

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Forget Calorie Counting: This Study That Proves Home Cooking Beats UPFs for Weight Loss
Forget Calorie Counting: This Study That Proves Home Cooking Beats UPFs for Weight LossBy Agi Kaja - 22/05/2026

For decades, the standard weight-loss advice in the UK has revolved around a single equation: calories in vs. calories out. If you want to lose weight, you simply need to consume fewer calories than you burn. But for millions of us struggling to maintain a healthy weight, this simple maths never quite seemed to add up. A groundbreaking new study from Imperial College London (ICL) and colleagues, published in the prestigious journal Nature Medicine, has finally explained why the traditional calorie-counting method fails. The research confirms what we have always believed: not all calories are created equal. The startling finding is that people who eat primarily minimally processed foods (MPFs) lose significantly more weight than those on a calorie-restricted diet composed of ultra-processed foods (UPFs), even when both groups consume the exact same number of kilocalories. This discovery is a potential game-changer, urging us to rethink everything we thought we knew about weight management and move towards a simpler, more powerful solution: home cooking with real, whole ingredients. The Study: Calorie-for-Calorie, UPFs are More Fattening In this unique clinical trial, researchers carefully monitored the diets of two groups of participants, both of whom were provided with meals that were perfectly matched in terms of calorie count, macronutrients (like fats, carbohydrates, and protein), and fibre content. The critical difference was the source of those calories. Group 1 consumed a diet where over 80% of calories came from minimally processed foods. Think fresh vegetables, raw legumes (like those from Whole Food Earth), whole grains, and basic home cooking. Group 2 consumed a calorie-for-calorie identical diet, but over 80% of their calories came from ultra-processed foods. This includes items like ready-made supermarket meals, refined breakfast cereals, processed meats, and mass-produced biscuits. Participants were allowed to eat until they felt full. The study was not about starving or restricting portion sizes; it was about the quality and processing level of the food. The results were astonishing. Within just a few weeks, the minimally processed group lost an average of 1.7kg, while the group on the identical-calorie ultra-processed diet gained an average of 1.9kg. Calorie-for-calorie, UPFs were promoting weight gain and fat accumulation. It's Not Just What You Eat, But How It's Processed Why this dramatic difference? The study suggests that traditional calorie counting is fundamentally flawed because it ignores the crucial concept of the food matrix. A food matrix is the complex, natural physical structure of a food, including its cells, fibres, and nutrient binding. When we consume a minimally processed whole food, like a raw almond or a whole-grain pulse, our body has to work physically and chemically to break down that food matrix. This process slows down digestion, releasing energy and nutrients slowly, and signalling satiety (fullness) more effectively. Our gut microbiome thrives on the naturally occurring fibres and nutrients found in intact whole foods. In contrast, ultra-processed foods (UPFs) have had their food matrix fundamentally destroyed. UPFs are typically industrial formulations deconstructed and reassembled, often containing: 5 or more ingredients, many of which you wouldn't find in a home kitchen (e.g., modified starches, emulsifiers, synthetic preservatives). High levels of refined fats, sugars, and salt, often added in perfect, hyper-palatable proportions to hit the brain's "bliss point" and encourage overeating. A "pre-digested" quality, where the food matrix is pulverised, causing calories and sugars to be absorbed rapidly, leading to extreme insulin spikes and subsequent blood sugar crashes, triggering immediate, intense cravings. Even if a UPF ready-meal claims "low fat" or "high protein," the underlying pulverised food matrix and presence of industrial additives mean the body handles those calories in a radically different way. Calorie counting fails because a calorie from a whole food and a calorie from an industrial formula are not processed the same by your complex biology. Busting the Myth of the "Healthy" UPF This study is a critical wake-up call for the UK, where "health-washed" UPFs are incredibly common. Many people trying to lose weight rely on "calorie-controlled" ready meals, "healthy" breakfast bars, and refined low-calorie shakes. We now know that even if these products fit a strict calorie target, their processed nature might be actively sabotaging your efforts. The body does not recognise these formulations in the same way it recognises real food. The Solution: The Return to Home-Cooked, Minimally Processed Foods The implication of this study is clear: to lose weight sustainably, we must deprioritise calorie counting and prioritise cooking from scratch with raw, minimally processed ingredients. This means building your diet around the types of ingredients we proudly provide at Whole Food Earth, such as: Whole Organic Pulses: Lentils, chickpeas, beans (e.g., our Organic Chickpeas). Raw Nuts and Seeds: Almonds, walnuts, chia seeds, pumpkin seeds (e.g., our Raw Almonds). Unprocessed Whole Grains: Brown rice, quinoa, whole oats (e.g., our Organic Brown Rice). Single-Ingredient Items: Like coconut oil or herbs and spices. The most powerful weight-loss tool you possess isn't a calorie-tracking app; it's your kitchen. By taking control of the ingredients and preparing simple meals using whole foods, you are not just managing calories; you are restoring your body's natural satiety signals and gut health. The UK diet landscape is dominated by ultra-processed options. Opting out of the industrial food system and returning to earth-sourced ingredients is the single most important step you can take toward true, sustainable nourishment and long-term health. Forget the maths of the diet industry; embrace the reality of real food.

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Can I order online and collect in store?
If you purchase the same products regularly, you can easily re-order them by copying your previous order.

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