Great British Bake Off: Are desserts ever healthy?

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Although not all their ingredients are healthy, desserts in moderation might not be as unhealthy as thought. Ruth Black/Stocksy
  • The desserts on The Great British Bake Off TV show may not be as unhealthy as you might think when viewed from a certain perspective.
  • The BMJ has published a study of the show’s recipes that finds 74% of the ingredient groups used correspond with a reduced risk of death and disease.
  • However, nutritionists say the tongue-in-cheek study lacks a consideration of some important factors and should be taken with a grain of salt.

Just like one last holiday present, The BMJ has published a study suggesting the mouth-watering, decadent desserts presented on The Great British Bake Off (TGBBO) TV series may not be quite as bad for you as you might assume.

The BMJ reports that many of the ingredients the shows bakers use come from food groups that are associated with a reduction in health risks.

This does not apply, of course, to co-host Pru Leith’s notorious taste for alcohol as an ingredient.

The BMJ’s tongue-in-cheek study is an umbrella study that compiles the results of other studies.

The show, for the uninitiated, is a sweet-natured competition between British bakers baking away in a spacious tent erected on the grounds of some very attractive U.K. real estate.

Presented with increasingly complex cooking challenges, they drop off one by one, week after week, until a final winning baker is anointed at a garden party for all the season’s participants and their families. It is surprisingly funny and emotional, and the food is frequently impressive to look at, at least.

Austere, however, is something the food is most definitely not, and it would seem obvious that much of it is the type of thing one’s physician would advise one to steer well clear of.

But, setting aside the study’s long list of limitations, its findings could be used to argue that Christmas bakes are not all bad. While it is timed for the holidays, its findings could apply to treats baked at any time.

“I like the focus on specific ingredients that have been previously shown to benefit Health, but, of course, a few ingredients alone may not tell the whole nutritional story of a dessert,” said registered dietitian Kristin Kirkpatrick.

“Analysis of all ingredients in a dessert as a whole may be a good next step toward assessing the nutrient density of these desserts,” she suggested.

Costa said the study’s approach “precludes any concrete positive correlations between the dessert recipes and health outcomes.”

She noted out of the TGBBO’s published recipes, “There’s a reason they don’t provide the nutrition facts. With an emphasis on decadence, these recipes appeal to the eyes and taste buds and really cannot be described as even remotely Healthy.”

Neither Kirkpatrick nor Costa suggested, however, that people should completely avoid dessert treats.

“I advise my patients to enjoy dessert without guilt and shame. If their dietary pattern is one rich in nutrient density the majority of the time, then simply choose a dessert that you love once in a while versus seeking Health benefits from dessert,” Kirkpatrick explained.

”Enjoy your holiday delicacies in moderation, but don’t anticipate health benefits or protective effects from your snow cake pops or baked Alaska tarts.”
— Kelsey Costa

Of course, as Kirkpatrick noted, healthier dessert ingredients are better for you.

“Any dessert that includes healthy fats — like nuts, seeds, and nut butter, as well as fruit, cocoa/dark chocolate — may have more healthful ingredients, especially when additional fiber is provided from some of these food,” she said.

She cautioned, though, that “often they come along with ingredients that may offset some of these benefits.”

In the end, said Kirkpatrick, “There are many aspects to longevity, with diet playing just one role, though a large role.”

“Perhaps the takeaway” from the study, Kirkpatrick said, was that “when not consumed regularly — or when it compromises the main food in the diet — dessert can be a pleasurable experience that does not potentially harm health when coupled with an otherwise nutrient-dense diet.”

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