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?

  • scarabic@lemmy.world
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    47 minutes ago

    There’s some logic in putting it last. First make sure you get nutritious food. Once you have, you can safely enjoy some indulgence. Number one, it won’t displace actual nutrition, because you took care of that first. And second, you’re more likely to indulge moderately because you filled up on real food first.

    So if there is any method here, I think it’s to put dessert last, not to put dessert before bed.

    However none of this explains why, after a meal, I immediately get sugar cravings.

  • rodneylives@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    Because it’s nice, and if you ate it first you wouldn’t want to have as much of the healthy stuff that came before. Not everything has to have an objective purpose. Nice things are nice.

  • schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 hours ago

    why do we eat dessert when we do?

    speak for yourself?

    In some cultures, such as mine (Austria, but also in Germany) it’s most common for the main (hot) meal to be eaten around the middle of the day, and if dessert is eaten, it’s with that meal. In the evening we usually just eat a relatively small amount of cold food (ham sandwiches or similar) and no dessert.

  • jimmy90@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    i think sugar and coffee at the end of a meal helps with digestion and gives your brain a little energy boost while your body is busy processing the meal

  • starlinguk@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    If you don’t like dessert, don’t eat dessert. I don’t. I also eat at 6.30 and go to bed at 11.

  • PapaStevesy@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    No one is forcing you to eat sweets right before bed, and that’s not what dessert is anyway. Dessert follows the entree, it’s part of the meal. If you decide to eat dinner right before bed, that’s on you.

  • BlackLaZoR@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    Sugary parts of the meal are digested more slowly when combined with other stuff (proteins, fats). And we eat dessert at the end because rapid surge of glucose in your bloodstream blocks hunger. You’re losing appetite for main course if you start from dessert.

    • Swaus01@piefed.socialOP
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      10 hours ago

      Interesting, i always thought sweet food “ruins appetite” just by raising your digestive system’s expectations

  • kubok@fedia.io
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    12 hours ago

    Where are you from, OP? Not only do we not eat dessert right before bedtime (where did you get that silly idea?), but where we live, dessert is commonly either milk-based, fruit based or both.

    • Swaus01@piefed.socialOP
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      10 hours ago

      milk-based Has it’s own natural sugars and usually comes in the form of custard (Added sugar) or ice cream (added sugar) or cream (extra fatty)

      fruit based Has it’s own natural sugars and usually comes with added sugar in the form of a pie, ice cream, jelly, jam, sugared fruit, canned fruit, et cetera

      Not only do we not eat dessert right before bedtime

      I do 😉 busy life i guess.

  • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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    15 hours ago

    Why are you on social media when studies have shown it’s bad for your mental health?

    • Swaus01@piefed.socialOP
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      10 hours ago

      This isn’t an argument byt a ponderance, and people can engage in one unhealthy thing but not another, without compromising their morals/belief system.

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    15 hours ago

    You assume people are eating so close to bedtime. I last eat 4-6 hours before bed. You also presuppose that the meal that has dessert is the one right before sleep, which may not be true in some or all cases.

      • Gold_E_Lox@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        11 hours ago

        i had just woken up when i posted this comment so I apologise for being flippant.

        actually reading the post, point 3 is perfect. i actually do have “lunch-dessert” and ive had it all my life, never really having “dinner-desert”

        so honestly, i like the question. “how did a sweet snack before bed become a cultural norm in the western world, and why/how did it beat out another, more optimal, point in the day?”

  • radix@lemmy.world
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    19 hours ago

    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.

    • Swaus01@piefed.socialOP
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      10 hours ago

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

      False.

      Yes your principle is right though. I just wonder how the society evolved to like eating sugar as the last meal of the day. Is it rooted more in hunter-gatherer lifestyle or in, say, rennaissance onwards lifestyle from after the Old World discovered sugarcane in the caribbean? I know there was an insane effort to use sugar in as many foods as possible, so as to make good on the investments into the expeditions and colonisation projects there.

      • Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        If you come in asking a question and then tell everyone who disagrees with your expected answer that they’re wrong, you’re acting in bad faith.