A popular rule of thumb among proponents of healthy food is that the fewer ingredients there are in something, better it is for you. With a remarkable 37 or so ingredients, many of which are polysyllabic chemical compounds, Twinkies would seem to embody the antithesis of that rule.
The photographer Dwight Eschliman was never a health nut himself, but he was raised by one; his mom kept her kids away from meat, dairy, or any kind of processed food. When Eschilman went away to college, he loosened up a bit, allowing himself to indulge in all sorts of previously forbidden treats, but by the time he had kids of his own, he found a renewed appreciation for simple, healthy food—and a renewed skepticism of chemical-filled, preservative-laden snacks. He'd also developed a love of disassembling ojects and photographing their component parts.
"Thus, this project," he writes in his photography book 37 or so Ingredients. "It's the product of a kid that was raised to be suspicious of foods that weren't assembled in mom's kitchen, and bordering on obsessive compulsive."
What follows is a selection from Dwight Eschliman's 37 or so Ingredients. For more information or to order a copy of the book, email twinkiebook[at]eschlimanphoto[dot]com.
















Talking with a coworker about personal hygiene.Photo credit
Offering up some uncomfortable news.Photo credit
Having a work conversation about hygiene.Photo credit
An important conversation between coworkers.Photo credit
Woman speaks aggressively into the face of a man wearing a mask.Photo credit 

Clinic are factoring more and more into health planning in the US. 

New Square in Cazin, Bosnia and HerzegovinaHasan Zulic/
Charitable donations.Photo credit 

Gif of woman excited via