This week’s goal…….learn to spot sugar!
This week is all about sugar awareness. As I hope most of
you know, sugar in the amounts that most people eat it is terrible for your
body, and another week, we will go over some of its effects. Since the 1700s,
sugar consumption has been on the rise. In the 1700s, the average person
consumed about 4 pounds of sugar per year. During the 1800s, that amount
increased to 18 pounds per year. By the end of the 1900s, people were consuming
90 pounds of sugar per year. How much are we eating now? Today, the average
American is eating over 150 pounds of sugar every year! Most people don’t even
realize how much they are consuming. So this week’s goal is to begin
understanding food labels and recognizing the tricks companies use to make
sugar look like a smaller ingredient than what it is.
1. Know the different names of sugar! First,
anything ending in –ose is a sugar; glucose, fructose, maltose, galactose, and
lactose. Other names sugar goes by include cane juice, dehydrated cane juice,
cane juice solids, cane juice crystals, dextrin, maltodextrin, dextran, barley
malt, beet sugar, corn syrup, corn syrup solids, caramel, buttered syrup, carob
syrup, brown sugar, date sugar, malt syrup, diatase, diatastic malt , fruit
juice, fruit juice concentrate, dehydrated fruit juice, fruit juice crystals,
golden syrup, turbinado, sorghum syrup, ethyl maltol, maple syrup, yellow
sugar.
2. When reading labels, you will notice that
ingredients are placed in order from most used to least used. If you start
paying attention, you will also notice that most of the time sugar is listed
more than once with different names. Sugar is sugar. All of these different
names have the same damaging effects on your body. Companies separate them into
different names to make it appear that sugar is not as high on the ingredient
list as it should be.
3. Our bodies have a low threshold for sugar,
normally about 2 teaspoons of added sugar two to three times a day. Now, one
pound equals 96 teaspoons. This means that the average American is eating about
40 teaspoons of sugar per day, which is well over the limit. Looking at food
labels, you will see that sugar is labeled in grams, and 4 grams equals one
teaspoon. Anything with more than 8 grams of sugar per serving is too much! And
you have to make sure you only eat that one serving!
This week, start looking at the
labels of the foods you are eating and build an awareness of your sugar intake.
Every time you reduce your sugar intake, you are on your way to being a
healthier you!
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