Thursday, July 8, 2010

sugar=sugar=sugar

from our friends at "whole 9"....
Sugar = Sugar = Sugar
We got the idea for this post in the middle of our SnoRidge CrossFit workshop. We were about an hour into the afternoon, and Dallas was talking about how (and why) sugar and artificial sweeteners make you less healthy. That led to a discussion of all the sneaky ways big business, marketing campaigns and advertisers find to appease the sugar tantrums in all of us. Which prompted one attendee to ask, “Do you have a comprehensive list of sugars somewhere on your site? A way to identify the different forms of sugar we may see in a list of product ingredients?”



Huh. Well, no, we didn’t… but that was an awesome idea, so now we do.



Today’s post is dedicated to calling out all of the sneaky ways SUGAR may try to hide in the foods you eat, and shining a light on the misleading claims that are made in support of one form of sugar or another. They (the high fructose corn syrup people, the agave people, the Stevia people) claim because a sugar is “natural” or “low on the glycemic index” or “non-nutritive” that it’s somehow healthy for us. On top of that, they sneak it in under the guise of a label that sounds vaguely plant-like and harmless, or in plain sight under its scientific name, easy to overlook because you just plain don’t know what it is. The truth? Sugar is sugar is sugar, regardless of the form it may take or the claims it might make. And on no planet does added sugar ever make you healthier.



Below is a list of the most commonly employed sneaky ways “they” find to sweeten the foods we eat. Don’t be fooled. Educate yourself, read your labels and avoid regular consumption of products with added sugar, in any form.



Just Plain Sugar



______ Sugar (brown sugar, cane sugar, raw sugar, beet sugar, confectioner’s sugar, etc.)

______ Syrup (high fructose corn syrup, malt syrup, refiner’s syrup, rice syrup, etc.)

Science-y Names for Sugar



Dextrose

Disaccharide

Fructose

Glucose

Galactose

Lactose

Maltodextrin

Maltose

Monosaccharide

Polysaccharide

Ribose

Saccharose

Sucrose

“Natural” Sugars



Agave Nectar

Date sugar

(Evaporated) Cane juice

Fruit juice*

Honey

Maple Syrup

Molasses

Rice Malt (extract)

(Sweet) Sorghum

Treacle

*Admittedly, it can be hard to know where to stop in your quest to remove added sugar from your diet. Fruit juice is basically just sugar, which is why we’re including it here. Does that mean your apple juice sweetened chicken sausage is out? That’s your call. We’re just here to present the information – what you do with it is up to you.



Artificial (Non-Nutritive) Sweeteners



Aspartame

Acesulfame-K/Potassium

Equal

Nutra-Sweet

Saccharin

Splenda

Stevia

Sucralose

SweetLeaf

Sweet ‘n Low

Truvia

Sugar Alcohols



Arabitol

Dulcitol

Erythritol

Glycol

Glycerol

Hydrogenated Starch Hydrosylate (HSH)

Iditol

Isomalt

Lactitol

Maltitol

Mannitol

Polyglycitol

Ribitol

Sorbitol

Threitol

Xylitol

4 comments:

  1. While none of those sweeteners are on my list, I am having trouble turning down the fruit, especially now during berry season.

    Thursday:
    150g lamb
    100g salad
    200g shrimp
    300g pork
    150g blackberries
    200g blueberries
    100g carrots
    100g almonds
    100g strawberries

    ReplyDelete
  2. Friday:
    150g chicken
    75g salad
    175g steak
    300g lamb
    125g strawberries
    125g raspberries
    100g grapes
    100g carrots

    ReplyDelete
  3. Saturday:
    200g raspberries
    150g blackberries
    80g almonds
    100g carrots
    150g chicken
    300g pork
    100g salmon
    150g blueberries

    ReplyDelete
  4. Sunday:
    175g lamb
    100g raspberries
    150g grapes
    150g chicken livers
    100g carrots
    300g chicken
    150g eggs
    100g pork
    100g pickles
    150g strawberries
    75g yellow pepper

    ReplyDelete