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251201

MONDAY 251201

Rest

Spicy Tuna Lettuce Wraps

Ultra-processed foods and human health

The main thesis and the evidence

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Rest day

Creamy, spicy tuna salad wrapped in crisp butter lettuce leaves—cool, crunchy, and packed with bold flavor.

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Ingredients

1 can (5 oz) wild-caught tuna, drained
2 Tbsp mayonnaise
1 tsp sriracha (or to taste, no sugar added)
½ tsp lemon juice
½ tsp sesame oil (optional, for flavor)
1 green onion, finely chopped
1 small celery stalk, finely chopped
Salt and pepper, to taste
6 large butter lettuce leaves (or romaine)
½ avocado, sliced
Optional garnish: sesame seeds, extra green onion, cilantro
Optional: 1 tsp olive oil (cold drizzle)

Macronutrients

Protein: 31g
Fat: 42g
Carbs: 5g

Preparation

In a bowl, combine drained tuna, mayonnaise (2 Tbsp), sriracha (1 tsp), lemon juice (½ tsp), sesame oil (½ tsp), chopped green onion, and celery. Mix until creamy. Season with salt and pepper to taste.

Lay out lettuce leaves. Spoon tuna mixture evenly into the center of each leaf. Add a slice or two of avocado to each wrap.

Top with sesame seeds, extra green onion, or cilantro if desired. Drizzle with olive oil (1 tsp) for added richness. Serve chilled.

Enjoy the recovery time, or make-up anything you missed from last week.

This Lancet Series paper lays out the core thesis that ultra-processed foods (UPFs)—defined not just by ingredients but by industrial processing itself—drive obesity, metabolic disease, and other health harms through pathways that cannot be explained by calories, sugar, fat, or additives alone. The authors synthesize epidemiology, mechanistic data, and clinical findings to argue that UPFs alter appetite control, disrupt gut and hormonal signaling, and promote overconsumption through hyper-palatability, texture engineering, and rapid digestibility.

The paper positions UPFs as a major, independent driver of global chronic illness and proposes that reducing exposure is essential for improving population health.

FULL ARTICLE

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