Advice on Choosing Health Food And
Healthy Foods And Reading Nutrition Labels
By Chris Robertson
Health food doesn't need a definition, does
it? We all know what health food is it's yogurt
and granola, whole-grain cereal and organically
grown vegetables and fruit. It's 100% natural,
no preservatives or dyes, unadulterated, pure.
When you put all that together, you should
have healthy food, yet all too often, what's
marketed as health food these days barely
classifies as food, let alone health food.
Take a look at one of our favorite
health food choices - yogurt. It hit supermarket
shelves in the early seventies, though
it had been available before that in health
food stores and restaurants. Real yogurt
has two ingredients: milk (whole, skim
or low fat) and live yogurt cultures.
That's health food - calcium, vitamin
D, vitamin A, protein. Next time you're
at the supermarket, take a look at the
dairy case. You'll find row after row
of hyper-sweetened brightly colored rainbow
swirled and candy-sprinkled yogurt packaged
in ways that appeal to our littlest consumers
- children. Millions of parents buy the
enticing packages, secure that because
it's yogurt, they're buying food that's
healthy for their children.
One look at the label, though, and it's
clear that these kiddy yogurts (as well
as most of the yogurt that's marketed
to adults) are a far cry from heath food.
Some of the most popular yogurts for children
contain anywhere from 3 to 10 added teaspoons
of sugar. Considering how many teaspoons
of yogurt are in a single serving, you
might as well hand your child the sugar
bowl. In addition, most yogurts include
"natural" ingredients that have
little to do with health food. Ingredients
like pectin (to thicken yogurt), carrageenan
(a seafood extract that gives some yogurts
their body, and annatto (for color) add
little nutritionally to yogurt. They're
in the mix to serve one main purpose:
to help yogurt survive its trip from the
factory to your table.
You'll find the same situation with other
foods that originally made their debut
as health foods in the seventies. Granola
has become granola bars with chocolate
chips and gooey caramel. Whole wheat flour
is bleached and denuded of its flavorful
kernels. Sunflower seeds are roasted in
oil and salted. Even brown rice comes
in the instant variety.
Healthy food not health food
The secret to feeding your family (and
yourself) a healthful diet of healthy
food is to read the labels. The United
States Food & Drug Administration
has laid out strict guidelines for nutritional
labeling of all food products. The nutrition
label will tell you all you need to know
to choose real health foods. Some things
to keep in mind when reading nutrition
labels for health foods:
* In the ingredient's portion of the
nutrition label, ingredients are listed
in order by amount. The ingredient that's
listed first is the main ingredient, followed
by the next largest amount, etc.
* The nutrition facts label must list
each of the required nutrients even if
the food provides 0% of the recommended
daily value.
* The nutrition facts label must list
what portion of the food's calories is
derived from fat, from sugar, from protein
and from carbohydrates. It will also break
down the fat into saturated and unsaturated
fat.
Reading labels on everything you feed
your family is the best way to tell whether
a food is really a health food - or just
masquerading as one.
About The Author
Chris Robertson is a published author
of Majon International. Majon International
is one of the worlds MOST popular internet
marketing and internet advertising companies
on the web. Visit their main business
resource web site at: http://www.majon.com
To learn more about subjects like health
food please visit the web site at: http://www.majon.com/directory/Food/
For more information and informative
related articles and links about this
subject matter and content, please visit
Majon's Food directory: http://www.majon.com/directory/Food.