How To Read Food Labels
Taking the time to read labels while you’re running through the
aisles at the grocery store may be hard, but the benefits to you and
your family can be enormous. And once you find products that suit your
taste and health buds, shopping will begin to hasten up again.
Reading the label is really the only way to know for sure what you are
eating. Many food manufacturers will put marketing claims in bold in an
effort to entice buyers such as ‘high in…’, ‘low fat’… and more. While
their claims are often true, reading the label itself will give you a
fuller picture of what the product really has to offer.
For instance, some products will claim they contain no trans fats in
bold letters while ignoring other less healthy attributes like their
sodium or saturated fat content. So you must read beyond the marketing.
Some marketing labels are tricky, as well. For example, a food product
can label itself as ‘natural’ as long as it started as a natural
product. A chicken can be labeled ‘natural’ even if it was raised using
hormones and antibiotics. When a chicken is labeled ’all natural’, it
means that there are also no additives like hormones or antibiotics. So
you can see how just knowing a few simple guidelines can make you a more
informed shopper.
“Low”
Low is a term used to describe many attributes like, low saturated fat,
low fat, low cholesterol, low calorie and low sodium. While these foods
are better than their higher fat or sodium content equivalents, low may
not be low enough. To qualify as a low sodium product, the item must
contain no more than 140 milligrams of sodium per serving. If you need
to be on a low sodium diet, look at the labels of comparable items. You
very well might find a similar product that doesn’t tout low sodium, but
has less than the 140 milligrams of other product.
Fats
Trans fats should be avoided at all costs. Saturated fats turn to
cholesterol in your body, clogging arteries, so you want to minimize
your intake.
Sugars
Once you start reading food labels, you’ll notice that lots of products
that don’t seem to require sugar contain sugar nevertheless. Pasta
sauces vary widely in sugar content, for instance. Why buy one with lots
of sugar when you don’t have to? Remember more sugar means more
calories.
High Fructose Corn Syrup
Almost all nutritionists will agree that high fructose corn syrup in one
of the biggest culprits in the nation’s obesity crisis. Amore dense
sugar syrup, high fructose corn syrup is an inexpensive ingredient for
manufacturers. A single 12-ounce can of soda has as much as 13 teaspoons
of sugar in the form of high fructose corn syrup. Even a low fat fruit
flavored yoghurt can have a significant quantity of high fructose corn
syrup.
Sodium
The average daily intake of salt is recommended at less than 2300 mg per
day for adults – less for children. If you buy a lot of prepared or
frozen foods, canned soups or snack foods, your sodium intake could run
very high.
So you can begin to see that reading labels at the supermarket is more
an imperative for good health than a take it or leave it proposition. It
might seem hard to find products that fit the bill for all of the above,
but once you start reading, you’ll find that good choices do remain. And
the more consumers reach for those good choices, the more change we’ll
see on those shelves.
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