Yes it is true that by eliminating carbohydrate foods such as bread and pasta, an athlete can lose 1.5 times more body fat than if he or she were to eliminate the same amount of calories of peanut butter.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Excess calories are indeed fattening. Carbohydrates consist of food with sugar, starch such as bread, wheat, milk, etc. Carbohydrates are more fattening. Peanut butter is a rich source of protein. It is extremely healthy. It has many fibers, minerals and, vitamins. So it contributes to weight loss also.
On the other hand, carbohydrates increase in weight. So if an athlete eliminates carbohydrates such as bread and pasta from his diet. He can lose 1.5 times more body fat than if he or she were to eliminate the same amount of calories of peanut butter. Peanut butter contains only 20% of carbohydrates.
Just macroanatomy right?
I would say A, as the only answer.
Hope that helps,
The correct answer is: consuming multiple servings of a product affects the nutritional values listed on the label by<em> doubling, or even tripling the amount of nutrients and calories consumed</em>.
Most packaged foods, such as potato chips, contain nutrition labels that generally look like this (refer to attached image). As you can see, this label lists the amount of calories and nutrients (carbohydrates, fats, sodium, etc.) found in one serving of chips- which is 1 ounce, or 15 chips. This serving size is fairly small, however, it contains 160 calories (with 60 grams of fat and 15 grams of carbohydrates). As the question states, packaged foods consumed in one sitting are often listed as multiple servings on the labeling; so if a person consumes 45 chips, he or she would be consuming three servings of the chips. This entails consuming 480 calories, instead of 160 calories from one serving.
Thus, consuming multiple servings of a product affects the nutritional values listed on the label by doubling, or even tripling the amount of nutrients and calories consumed.
thats pretty cool but I can drink 10 gallons of glue in a min