Monday, May 12, 2014

'Break-Up with Sugar' Series:

First Thing's First:  How Much Sugar Are You Eating?

Today, a hot lunch served in the lunchroom at my school, a lunch lunch containing only cold food items, ironically enough, contained 66 grams of sugar.  Sixty-Six.  A single strawberry Dannon yogurt, a 1% milk fat string-cheese stick, a single serving bowl of Total Raisin Bran with a cup (8 oz) of 1% White or Nonfat Chocolate milk, and Pepperidge Farm Goldfish Giant Grahams for dessert. Sixty-Six grams of sugar for lunch.

How much sugar should you be eating?  The answer, of course, depends.  There are natural sugars, like those found in bananas, honey and milk, and there are added sugars, like those found in Pepperidge Farm Goldfish Giant Grahams.  Real food deserves consideration for balancing sugar intake on the whole, but processed foods are the real culprit when it comes to a diet too sweet to be true.


"The maximum amount of added sugars you should eat in a day are: Men: 150 calories per day (37.5 grams or 9 teaspoons). Women: 100 calories per day (25 grams or 6 teaspoons)." Dr. Oz, CNN, AHA, Men's Health, Woman's Day...  you name it, they all refer to the American Heart Association's recommendation.  Surpassing the recommended sugar intake limit is awfully easy to do.

Where is added sugar found?  Everywhere.  The spoonful in your coffee, the syrup on your pancakes, the popsicles in your freezer, the peanut butter in your pantry, and in every other processed food package marketed with cheap prices and coupons to boot.  Look on the label or for words that end in 'ose'.

While you are raiding your pantry to add up your sugar intake for the day, grab an apple.  Drink some water or herbal tea.  Eat foods that give your vitamins their vitamins.  Wash your hands of marketed, mass produced, pre-packaged food stuffs and get back to what nature knows best.

Tomorrow, the break-up process begins!

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