| Dishonest
food labeling
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Due to the lack of public awareness,
deceitful food manufacturers have been making false labeling
claims since the 1890’s. The following are some examples
of how food manufacturers show a sense of dishonesty towards
their loyal customers.
“TRANS
FATS FREE” BUTTERY SPREAD
There are many companies
that have the words “No Trans Fats” or
“Trans Fat Free” in big fancy letters
on the front label of their product. They are obviously
trying to tell people that trans fats are not good
for humans to eat as a healthy food. However, if you
spin the package around and check the ingredient label
on the back, you may still find “partially hydrogenated
fat” listed. This is because companies take
advantage of lackadaisical food labeling laws that
say you can call your product “free” of
something if it contains less than a half a gram per
serving. If you make the serving size small enough,
you can call anything trans fat free! |
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Ingredients:
Vegetable
oil, water, partially hydrogenated
soybean oil, whey, salt, soy lecithin, potassium
sorbate, citric acid, artificial flavor, vitamin A, colored
with beta carotene.
MANIPULATING
THE SERVING SIZE
By lowering the serving
size on the honey nut version, the cereal manufacturer
is able to show comparable amounts of carbohydrates
without shying people away.
If this cereal had the correct serving size listed,
the total amount of carbohydrates would state 30 grams. |

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SUGAR
FREE DOES NOT MEAN CARBOHYDRATE FREE
Although sugar alcohols are
classified as a carbohydrate, food manufacturers do not consider
them to be a carbohydrates on a food label. The following
is an example of a “sugar-free” candy bar that
replaces sugar with the sugar alcohols isomalt and maltitol.
The type of carbohydrate contained in this candy bar, polydextrose,
is an extremely fast absorbing carbohydrate. Since polydextrose
is not a “simple” sugar (one or two units of sugar),
this another reason to call the product “sugar free.”

Ingredients: Isomalt,
maltitol, roasted peanuts, cocoa butter, chocolate, partially
defatted peanut flour, vegetable oil (palm kernel and hydrogenated
palm), polyglycitol syrup, sodium caseinate, and less than
2% or milkfat, peanut oil, soy lecithin, egg whites, dl-alpha
tocopherol acetate (to preserve freshness), glycerin, polydextrose,
mono-and diglycerides, salt, butter, corn syrup solids, modified
food starch, guar gum, artificial and natural flavors, TBHQ
and citric acid (to preserve freshness), sucralose, caramel
color.
Maltitol (2.1 calories per gram): Maltitol
is made by the hydrogenation (chemical manipulation) of maltose
(a simple sugar). Maltitol is used in sweet foods including
sugarless hard candies, ice creams, chewing gum, and chocolate.
Isomalt (2 calories per gram): Isolmalt is
a sugar alcohol that is manufactured from table sugar and
often found in candy, cough drops, lollipops, and wafers.
Isomalt is only partially digested by humans and the rest
is metabolized by the bacteria in the large intestines, which
contributes to gas and watery bowels.
“SUGAR
FREE” RASPBERRY PRESERVES
The manufacturer of
sugar-free raspberry preserves replaces the simple
sugars with complex carbohydrates like polydextrose
and maltodextrine. Since these carbohydrates are longer
than 2 glucose units, they are not considered a type
of “sugar.” This can be misleading due
to the fact these sugars absorb much faster than fructose,
which is one of the naturally occurring sugars contained
in raspberries. Polydextrose and maltodextrine are
easily broken apart by the digestive system into pure
glucose which rapidly absorbs into the bloodstream.
The primary relevance carbohydrates have in regards
to human nutrition is not the type of sugar, but the
rate by which they absorb into the bloodstream (i.e.
glycemic index). |
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Ingredients:
Water, raspberry preserves, polydextrose, maltodextrine, fruit
pectin, locus bean gum, natural flavor, citric acid, aspartame,
potassium sorbate, calcium chloride, red # 40, blue # 1.
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