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All this sweet talk on sugar is making families confused and even guilty about eating a piece of fruit. Some health reports say sugar is safe and others report we must go cold turkey and completely deny this white stuff.

The most important part of the story has been overlooked: the question should be what are the safe and unsafe amounts of sugars.

The poison is in the dose. Lactose, glucose, and fructose are all sugar. Lactose is the sugar component from dairy products. Glucose in our natural food supply is used for brain and muscle energy when they are in need of refuelling. Both lactose and glucose sugars have an important place in our diets. Fructose is metabolised in a different way than lactose and glucose. However, too much sugar is too much sugar, in any form and excess consumption is not good for our wellbeing. Excessive quality proteins or fats are not good for our health either. Our health and the health of our children is in danger because we are not aware of the amount of hidden sugars in our foods. Becoming knowledgeable and aware of the names of hidden sugars and quantities is one task we should all commit to this year. The Sugar Disguise Manufacturers are good at disguising sugar. Every manufacturer product in Australia has a nutritional panel. Become a label reader and note that ingredients are listed in decreasing order by weigh on the packet. LOOK FOR Sugar in disguise:

  • Turbinado sugar
  • Raw sugar
  • Maltodextrin
  • Barley malt
  • Malt sugar
  • Corn syrup
  • Sucrose
  • Maltose
  • Dextrose
  • Manitol
  • Fructose
  • Glucose
  • Molasses
  • Treacle
  • Malt extract
  • Syrup
  • Fruit concentrate

The Sugar Surprise If the nutritional panel says that a muesli bar has 36 gr of sugar, that means that is roughly 8 ½ teaspoons of sugar in some form. If a can of soft drink or ginger beer has 48 grams of sugar, that is 12 teaspoons of sugar.  If a small container of honey yogurt claims 28 grams of sugar, then it contains 7 teaspoons of some form of sugar. For a general rule of thumb divide the number of grams of sugar by 4 and you will see how many teaspoons of sugar there are in the serving size of that product. The American Heart Association states that for optimal health we should only be consuming 6-9 teaspoons of sugar per day, yet most of us are consuming more than 30 per day. The World Health Organisation is currently working on a new proposal on its recommendations of 6 teaspoons per day for optimal health.

Try This Not This Why?
Real Oats drizzled with maple syrup Boxed cereals A small serving size of some pre-sweetened cereals can contain up to 7 teaspoons of added sugars. You would not put 7 teaspoons of sugar on your oats.
Cocoa, Almond & Date protein balls Packaged muesli bars Homemade protein balls contain natural sugars and you control the amount. ’Healthy muesli’ bars are often full of hidden sugars- usually about 5 tsp per bar..
Greek plain yogurt with honey and seeds Fruit flavoured yogurt Flavoured yogurts contain concentrated fruit syrups or purees and lots of hidden sugar. Often about 7 teaspoons per serve.
Dark chocolate bar 99% fat free lollies Don’t fall for ‘fat free’ marketing. A one kilo bag of sugar can claim to be fat free. A small handful will be about 6 teaspoons of sugar.
Fruit, yes fresh fruit! Fruit juice Fresh fruit is full of vitamins and minerals.   Most importantly, it is full of fibre, which slows down the way its natural sugar effects blood sugar. It is too easy to drink a 3 minute apple juice without fibre, but it is not easy to eat the five apples the juice was made from. Even though it is natural sugar – there is about 5 teaspoons.
Water, coconut water, homemade smoothies, vegetables juices, teas, coffees, sparking water with a splash of fruit juice. Soft drinks, flavoured milks, flavoured coffees, premade smoothies, and sports drinks Check the label on these products. Liquid sugars are one of the primary risk factors for diabetes, obesity and other health sugar related conditions.   Most sodas have at least 10 teaspoons of unnatural sugars in them!

A true sugar addict may find coming off sugar completely and then easing your way back into a low- sugar lifestyle is a worthy transition and a profitable investment in your health. Once you begin eating real, whole food, you will forget about the junk food of the past and the fear of sugar.

 

  • Thank you very much. This was a great article.

    Reply

  • So many names for sugar. An informative article. I’ve started halving the amount of sugar in homemade muffins and really we barely notice the difference. Its one way to try reduce sugar in my families diet.

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  • A useful and informative read.Thanks

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  • great artical thanks for sharing 🙂

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  • I love my sugar and get withdrawal from it if I don’t eat it at some time during the day

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  • Well i must admit that i dont consume a lot of sugar on a daily basis. Not that I try to avoid it but its just not something that is a part of my normal diet.
    I tend to crave salty things more then sweet.

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  • Wow. Just too many alternative names for sugar. Thanks for the information.

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  • Gee I don’t know what to eat anymore! It seems like we are having the wool pulled over our eyes by food manufacturers. It shouldn’t be this hard to eat healthy! Thanks for the article.

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  • Sugar is everywhere in most processed food.


    • Even some raw vegetables have sugar in them. You can research “sugar in vegetables” on google.

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  • Excellent article. I never realised how much sugar they put in foods.

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  • I realise we probably eat more sugar than we should and as per your article it does come in disguise in a lot of products, however if I were to take the time to read all the listed ingredients in everything I buy – I’d never be able to leave the supermarket so I rely on articles like yours and basic common sense.

    I went cold turkey in cutting out sugar from my coffee and tea altogether and there are certain well known brands of cereals I would never buy due the high sugar content, however I still do love my chocolate but I’m no soft drink or flavoured milk junkie.

    I strive to do better…

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  • It is amazing how sugar is in practically everything these days!

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  • people really do need to read the ingredients in what they eat!!

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  • A very interesting read thanks

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  • I believe sugar as with all things “Moderation” should be the message we should all heed. Thank you for this article.

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  • Great article thanks for sharing

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  • Great article and thanks so much. Sugar is way to high in so many things and we all need to take note and reduce the amount of sugar we consume. For anyone with FIBROMYALGIA a real reduction in bad sugar is a real help.

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  • Wow! Who knew sugar had so many names.

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  • Sugar is everywhere! It’s so hard to avoid it.

    Reply

  • Very interesting article and makes me and I’m sure lots of other people think about sugar.

    Reply

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