The Food Matrix: Why There’s No Such Thing as a ‘Good’ or ‘Bad’ Food

We’ve all been there. You reach for a snack, and somewhere in the back of your mind, a voice pipes up: is this good or bad for me? It’s a habit we’ve been conditioned into — sorting food into tidy moral categories, as if a biscuit were villainous and a stick of celery were saintly.

But nutrition science tells a more nuanced story. One of the most important concepts emerging from that science is the food matrix — and understanding it could fundamentally change the way you think about what you eat.

What Is the Food Matrix?

The food matrix refers to the physical and chemical structure of a food — how its individual components (carbohydrates, fats, proteins, fibre, water, vitamins, and minerals) are physically organised and interact with one another. It’s not just what food contains, but how those nutrients are packaged, arranged, and delivered to your body.

Two foods can share almost identical nutritional profiles on paper yet have completely different effects in the body — simply because of how their matrix is structured. This is why blanket labels like “healthy” or “unhealthy” are so often misleading. The food matrix invites us to ask a better question: not what is in this food, but how will my body actually experience it?

The Apple Argument: A Tale of Two Matrices


Let’s take one of the most illuminating examples in nutrition: the humble apple.

Ask most people whether an apple is healthy, and they’ll say yes without hesitation. Ask whether apple juice is healthy, and many will say the same. After all, it comes from apples, right?

Here’s where the food matrix changes everything.

A bowl of fruit, including apples and pears

When you eat a whole apple, you’re consuming the entire structure of the fruit. The sugars — primarily fructose — are locked within the cell walls of the apple’s flesh. These walls are made up of fibre, including pectin, which slows digestion considerably. Your body has to physically break down that cellular structure before it can access the sugars. This process takes time. As a result, glucose enters your bloodstream gradually, your insulin response is measured, and you feel fuller for longer. One medium apple contains around 4–5 grams of fibre and takes genuine effort to consume and digest.

When you drink apple juice, even if it’s freshly pressed and 100% “natural,” the picture is completely different. The juicing process has already done the mechanical work of breaking down the cell walls. The fibre — your body’s great regulator — has been largely removed or rendered ineffective. What remains is liquid sugar, with virtually no structural complexity left to slow its absorption. That same apple’s worth of fructose now floods into your bloodstream rapidly, causing a sharper spike in blood sugar and a corresponding insulin response. And because the physical bulk and fibre are gone, the satiety signals that a whole apple would trigger simply don’t fire in the same way.

This is the food matrix at work. The apple and the juice contain similar ingredients, but they are nutritionally and physiologically worlds apart — because the matrix has been dismantled.

It’s Not the Food. It’s What You Do to It.

A bowl of whole oats

The apple example is a gateway into a much broader principle: food preparation and processing profoundly alter the food matrix, and therefore the nutritional experience of eating. Consider oats. A bowl of traditional, slow-cooked porridge oats has a robust matrix. The beta-glucan fibre forms a thick gel in your gut, slowing digestion, feeding beneficial bacteria, and helping to stabilise blood sugar. 

Instant porridge — where the oats have been pre-cooked, dried, and rolled thinner — breaks down far more quickly, offering less of that slow-release benefit. Same food. Very different matrix.

Or think about tomatoes. Raw tomatoes contain lycopene, a powerful antioxidant. But lycopene is actually morebioavailable when tomatoes are cooked and combined with a small amount of fat — like in a rich tomato sauce made with olive oil. Here, cooking and preparation enhance the food matrix rather than diminish it. Not everything lost is good; not everything gained is bad.

Even something as simple as chewing plays a role. Research has shown that more thoroughly chewed food is digested differently to food that’s eaten quickly, affecting satiety hormones and the rate of nutrient absorption. The matrix begins to shift the moment you take a bite.

Why Labelling Food ‘Good’ or ‘Bad’ Is Too Simple

When we call a food “bad,” we almost always mean a processed version of it — or a preparation that has stripped away the structural integrity that made it beneficial in the first place. White bread isn’t inherently bad; but compared to a dense, slow-fermented sourdough made with whole grains, its matrix is far less complex, its fibre far lower, and its impact on blood sugar far more pronounced.

The “bad food” label also ignores context entirely. A banana consumed after a long run, when your muscles are hungry for fast-releasing glucose, is a very different nutritional event to the same banana eaten sedentary on a sofa. The food hasn’t changed. The context has.

This matters because moral food labelling creates anxiety, guilt, and an all-or-nothing mindset that rarely serves our health. It directs our attention away from the things that genuinely shape nutritional quality: the degree of processing, the cooking method, the food combinations, the context of consumption, and the overall pattern of our diet.

Practical Takeaways: Honouring the Food Matrix

Whole grains
Edamame bean poke bowl
Fresh fruit

Understanding the food matrix doesn’t require a degree in biochemistry. It asks for a simple shift in perspective:

Choose whole over processed where you can. The closer a food is to its original form, the more likely its matrix is intact. This doesn’t mean never eating processed foods — it means appreciating that the further food travels from its original state, the more its matrix changes.

Think about preparation. Steaming vegetables retains more of their cellular structure and nutrients than boiling. Slow cooking legumes from dried preserves more beneficial compounds than relying solely on tinned versions. Small choices in the kitchen have real effects.

Eat, don’t drink, your calories. Liquids — smoothies, juices, even blended soups — have altered matrices that generally reduce satiety and speed up absorption compared to their whole-food equivalents. This isn’t a reason to avoid them; it’s a reason to be mindful about them.

Stop moralising food. There are no good or bad foods — only foods with different matrices, different contexts, and different roles in a diet. A diet built on variety, whole foods, and thoughtful preparation will serve you far better than one built on restriction and guilt.

The Bottom Line

The food matrix reminds us that nutrition is not a simple equation. The same nutrients in the same quantities can behave in vastly different ways depending on how they’re structured, processed, and prepared. An apple and apple juice are not the same thing. Whole oats and instant oats are not the same thing. And a food eaten in one context is not the same as that food eaten in another.

Rather than asking whether a food is good or bad, start asking: how whole is this? How has it been prepared? What has been added or removed? Those are the questions that actually move the needle — and the food matrix is the framework that helps you answer them.


Enjoyed this article? Share it with someone who’s still sorting their meals into “good” and “bad” — they might just change their mind.

Epigenetics and Aging After 40: Why Your Lifestyle Matters More Than Your Genes

If you’ve been told that aging is all about the genes you inherited, I have empowering news: science has turned that notion on its head. While your DNA provides the blueprint, the emerging field of epigenetics and aging reveals that your daily choices—what you eat, how you move, how you manage stress—are the real architects of how you age after 40.


What Is What Is Epigenetic Aging, and Why Should You Care?

Think of your genes as an instruction manual. Epigenetics determines which pages get read and which get bookmarked. The word comes from the Greek “epi,” meaning “above” or “upon,” because these changes sit above your genetic code, switching genes on or off without altering the DNA sequence itself.

A DNA image

Here’s the truly inspiring part: unlike genetic mutations, epigenetic changes are reversible. Research on identical twins dramatically illustrates this point. Despite sharing the same DNA, twins show increasingly different patterns of DNA methylation as they age due to environmental factors and lifestyle choices. One twin might develop diabetes while the other remains healthy—not because of different genes, but because of different epigenetic modifications shaped by their lifestyles.

Studies suggest that only about 25% of longevity is related to DNA sequence, while 75% is attributed to environmental influences such as diet, physical activity, and social interactions. Your genes load the gun, but your lifestyle pulls the trigger—or keeps the safety on.


Measuring Your True Biological Age with Epigenetic Clocks


Nutrition: Eating to Rewrite Your Genetic Story

The food on your plate sends powerful signals to your genes. Dietary interventions such as the Mediterranean and DASH diets have been shown to enhance health biomarkers and slow epigenetic aging through favourable DNA methylation.


Focus on these categories of nutrients:

A healthy plate of vegetables for healthy ageing

Methyl Donors: Green leafy vegetables rich in folate, eggs and liver containing choline, and fish providing B12 supply the building blocks for healthy DNA methylation patterns.

Epi-Bioactives: Polyphenols found in colourful fruits and vegetables, spices, coffee, green tea, and olive oil help regulate the enzymes that control epigenetic marks. Cruciferous vegetables like broccoli, brussels sprouts, and kale contain sulforaphane, which activates antioxidant pathways and reduces inflammation.

Learn more about nutrition and epigenetics at the National Institute on Aging and Stanford Lifestyle Medicine.


Exercise: Moving Your Way to Younger Cells

Physical activity doesn’t just strengthen muscles—it rewrites your epigenetic code. High-intensity interval training induces epigenetic modifications that improve metabolic function, mitochondrial biogenesis, and insulin sensitivity. Exercise enhances histone acetylation, which protects against cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative disorders, and mood disturbances.

Research shows that after 8 weeks of voluntary resistance training, aged mice exhibited nearly 8 weeks of younger epigenetic age in their muscles. The human equivalent? Regular moderate exercise can literally turn back your cellular clock.

The key is consistency without extremes. Aim for 30 minutes of moderate to vigorous activity most days of the week. Whether it’s brisk walking, swimming, cycling, or strength training, find what you enjoy and stick with it.


Sleep: Your Nightly Reset Button

Woman sleeping

Sleep isn’t just rest—it’s when your body performs essential epigenetic maintenance. Seven to eight hours of quality sleep allows genes responsible for cellular repair and immune function to express properly. Sleep deprivation, conversely, accelerates epigenetic aging and increases inflammation markers.


Stress Management: Protecting Your Genes from Chronic Worry

Nearly 25% of DNA methylation sites associated with aging are located in stress response regions, highlighting the relationship between stress and accelerated aging. Chronic stress alters methylation of genes that regulate cortisol sensitivity, leading to prolonged stress responses and immune dysfunction.

The antidote? Practices like meditation, breathing exercises, yoga, and mindfulness have been shown to counteract stress-induced epigenetic damage. Even 20 minutes of daily relaxation practice can produce measurable benefits in your epigenetic age.


The Compounding Power of Lifestyle After 40

What makes epigenetics truly empowering is that you don’t need to be perfect—you need to be consistent. Small, sustainable changes compound over time. The person who eats more vegetables, takes daily walks, manages stress reasonably well, and maintains social connections is actively programming their genes for longevity and vitality.

Research shows that 12 weeks of improved lifestyle choices with regulated diet and exercise training were associated with changes in DNA methylation at regions of genes linked to tumour suppression, immune cell metabolism, and overall aging. Three months. That’s how quickly meaningful change can begin.


Your Epigenetic Future Starts Today

The science of epigenetics has given us something rare: genuine hope backed by rigorous research. You’re not trapped by your family history or your genes. Every meal, every workout, every good night’s sleep, every moment of calm breathing—these are all opportunities to influence your gene expression in positive ways.

Yes, some people have genetic advantages. But recent studies indicate that reversible epigenetic drift constitutes a central regulator of aging and age-related diseases. What you do matters more than what you inherited. Your forties, fifties, sixties, and beyond can be decades of vitality, energy, and health if you make choices that support healthy gene expression.

The power to age well isn’t locked in your DNA—it’s in your hands, on your plate, in your daily routines, and in the way you choose to live each day. That’s not just inspiring; it’s scientifically validated truth.


Ready to Take Control of Your Biological Age?

If you’re ready to apply the science of epigenetics to your own life, I’d love to support you. As a health coach specialising in helping people over 40 age well, I create personalised programs that translate cutting-edge research into practical, sustainable lifestyle changes.

Set Point Theory: Why Your Body Defends Its Weight


What Is Set Point Theory?

Woman in workout gear eating salad

The Research Behind Set Point Theory

Key Studies and Findings


What You Can Do to Work With (Not Against) Your Set Point

1. Focus on Gradual, Sustainable Changes

2. Prioritise Protein and Fibre

3. Build and Maintain Muscle Mass

4. Optimise Sleep and Manage Stress

5. Use Strategic Refeeds and Diet Breaks

6. Develop Non-Food Coping Strategies

7. Focus on Behaviour Change, Not Just Weight

8. Consider Your Personal History

The Bottom Line

What is Fibremaxxing? – The Gut-Health Trend You Need to Know About

A vibrant still life of fresh herbs on a rustic wooden cutting board, perfect for culinary inspiration.

Cauliflower cheese tart

Cauliflower Cheese: Comfort Food as part of a Balanced Diet

Who says comfort food can’t be part of a healthy lifestyle? Cauliflower cheese is a classic dish that I absolutely love, but it’s often viewed as an indulgence rather than a balanced meal. However, with a little thought and the right pairings, it can absolutely have a place in your diet.

The key to enjoying this dish while supporting your health goals lies in creating a balanced plate. A balanced plate includes a mix of carbohydrates, proteins, healthy fats, and plenty of vegetables for fibre, vitamins, and minerals. While my cauliflower cheese tart offers protein and fat from the cheese sauce and fibre from the cauliflower, it’s a bit lacking when it comes to variety. That’s where your sides come in!

Pair your cauliflower cheese with a vibrant selection of side vegetables or a fresh salad. Think roasted carrots, steamed green beans, crispy kale, or a crisp leafy salad with a zingy lemon dressing. This not only boosts the meal’s nutritional value but also creates a plate that’s colorful, filling, and satisfying. and it will help you towards your 30 a week!

Balance is all about enjoying the foods you love without sacrificing your health goals. It’s not about restrictions but more about making choices that nourish both your body and your soul. Cauliflower cheese tart may feel indulgent, but when combined with plenty of fresh vegetables, it becomes part of a meal that’s as nutritious as it is delicious.

Ready to try it yourself? My cauliflower cheese recipe is simple, comforting, and packed with flavour—scroll down to discover how to make it! Don’t forget to load up your plate with veggies to turn this classic dish into a healthy, balanced meal.

My cauliflower cheese tart recipe