Richard Wrangham, a primate expert at Harvard University, discovered an interesting thing when he tried to eat like the chimpanzees he was studying.
Their raw diet was deeply unsatisfying. He was so hungry he had to return to human foods.
The experience led him to propose that cooked food played a pivotal role in human evolution, helping us diverge from other primates. He theorized that humans — the only animals that can't live on a raw, wild diet — could extract more usable energy from cooked foods because they were easier to digest. That would have allowed us to feed bigger brains. Also, chimpanzees spend six or seven hours a day chewing, so we were able to do more civilized things with our time.
His hypothesis is still under debate, but Rachel Carmody, who was a researcher in his lab, lent support with a finding that lab mice did indeed become heavier on cooked than on raw food although they took in the same number of calories.
Separately, a study by the U.S. Department of Agriculture last year found that the typical calorie-measuring technique overestimates how many calories people get from an ounce of almonds, which are difficult to digest. Instead of 170 calories, they concluded, the nuts have 129.
These are among many new lines of research that call into question our long-standing comprehension of food energy. Calories are starting to look a lot more complicated. If you think 500 calories of cake are the same as 500 calories of cauliflower when it comes to dieting, you may have to rethink.
"A calorie is a calorie from an energy balance point of view, but, from an effect on the body, there may be a difference," said Dale Schoeller, a professor of nutritional sciences at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and an officer of the Obesity Society.
Researchers like Carmody question whether the calories you see on food labels accurately reflect how many calories your body actually uses. Others are studying the complex chain of signals that foods trigger, telling the brain you're hungry or full or need to store fat. The calories may be the same, but some foods, like cake, make not eating more difficult.