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Salad nicoise. Tuna with baby potatoes, eggs, beans, tomatoes, olives and parsley.
‘They cannot afford £4.50 on a fancy niçoise salad.’ Photograph: robynmac/Getty Images/iStockphoto
‘They cannot afford £4.50 on a fancy niçoise salad.’ Photograph: robynmac/Getty Images/iStockphoto

Are ultra-processed foods always harmful?

People buy ultra-processed foods because they can’t afford anything else, writes Laurence N Mann; plus letters from Helen Grist and Niklas Grundstrom

I read Rachel Dixon’s piece (‘Avoid ingredients you don’t know’: 25 of the healthiest processed foods you can buy in the UK, 31 July) with wry amusement, segueing seamlessly into irritation.

Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) are damaging health on a massive scale. Cheap, carb and sugar-laden, over-packaged foodstuffs are targeted at the poorest sections of society. They cannot afford £4.50 on a fancy niçoise salad or a litre of flavoured water in snazzy cans.

The Guardian isn’t helping by pointing Waitrose shoppers to overpriced hummus or falafel, or expensive ice-cream. That’s really not going to address the crisis of diabetes in disadvantaged neighbourhoods.
Laurence N Mann
Twickenham, London

I feel the article by Rachel Dixon has missed an opportunity to enlighten readers about UPFs. We have been told that they pose some health risks – so what is a UPF? Is it a food made from certain ingredients, the way the food is manufactured (ie processed), or a combination of both? I have never enjoyed cooking, and with convenience foods I am only too happy to let someone else do it, so that I can enjoy the time saved to do something else. So when does a “convenience” food become a UPF?
Helen Grist
Honeybourne, Worcestershire

Doesn’t the article show that it all comes down to cost? A lot of what you show is Waitrose or high-end expensive foods. It’s one thing to pay £1.15 for a 40g bag of Tyrell’s crisps when a 22-pack of 25g Sainsbury’s crisps costs £3.65. The article you should have written would show how people on a budget can afford to eat healthily. Why does the food industry place a premium on healthy products? Pay or die is the question.
Niklas Grundstrom
East Preston, West Sussex

Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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